


FT MEADE 
GenCol1 


WILLIAM HENRY MAY 
CAPT Co I 23 CONN VOL. 


A RELIC OF 
^ 1864 


THE CIVIL WAR 
1914 


J9LEG132EE..Q£.....G.QP.YHI.GH.^a 


iorary of Congress 


..Washington.,,.I)...Q. 
















































Class_:_ 

Book___ 

Gop>Tight N°_ , ' 


COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. 


















V 


1864* ****** *FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY* ****** *1914 



FIRST PUBLISHED BY UNION PRISONERS AT 

CAMP FORD, TYLER, TEXAS, 1864 

RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED TO 

“THE OLD 72” 

Entered according to the act of Congress, in the year of 1864, by Wm. H. May, in the clerk’s office of the District 
Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New York. 


REPRODUCED BY HIS COMRADES 

Captain ALFRED B. BEERS Major THOMAS BOUDREN 

Comrade FRANK MILLER 


UNDER THE AUSPICES OF 

ELIAS HOWE, Jr., POST, NUMBER THREE 

DEPARTMENT OF CONNECTICUT 

G. A. R. 


DECORATION DAY 

1914 










PREFACE 


I N presenting “The Old Flag” with the history of its origin and of 
the originator, after a lapse of fifty years, it is the desire of the 
publishers that it be given a place among the books which tell of 
events connected with the great War of the Rebellion. 

In the following pages will be found the true story of this most 
unique memento of the rebel prison. A real newspaper, the chronicle 
of Union soldiers who were confined in a Texas camp for more than 
a year. The manner of its making and the matter contained in its 
columns proclaim it to be a wonderful war relic. 

This initial edition, limited to five hundred copies, is offered, first 
to his comrades of Elias Howe, Jr., Post, No. 3, of Bridgeport, Conn.; 
members of the Grand Army of the Republic; Sons of Veterans; 
the Spanish War Veterans, and to those kind and generous friends of 
the late Captain William H. May who made the publication possible. 

To Commander Alfred B. Beers, Comrade Frank Miller, the late 
Major Thomas Boudren, Dr. George L. Porter, General Henry J. 
Seeley, Comrade Homer D. Jennings and the Hon. Lynn W. Wilson 
are extended the heartfelt thanks of the beneficiary for their very 
kind help. 

Respectfully, 

The Publishers. 


M 21 !9K©CtA3?4602 


re 


t 


LETTER OF THANKS 

To My Late Husband’s Comrades of Elias Howe, Jr., Post, No. 3, 
G. A. R., Department of Connecticut, and My Dear Friends: 

I desire to express my deep gratitude for the assistance given me 
by your Post in presenting this interesting memento of the Civil War 
to the public. While, of course, the accruing financial benefits are of 
considerable importance to me, they are far from equalling the senti¬ 
ment of affection that attaches to your great and noble fraternity. 

As a record of an interesting incident of the war this memento 
will undoubtedly be of interest to all who may secure a copy of it, 
while of those who, like my husband, suffered the hardships of rebel 
prisons, it will be of unusual interest. 

I shall hold myself forever obligated to the gallant comrades of 
my dear husband who in this, as in many other instances, have ex¬ 
emplified your noble order’s principles of Fraternity, Charity and 
Loyalty. My earnest prayer will ever be for your happiness here and 
in the other land where grief and sorrows never dawn. 

Affectionately yours, 




*T' 


HISTORY OF 


“THE OLD FLAG” 

-BY - 

DR. GEORGE LORING PORTER 
-»€- 


T HE three accompanying copies of “The 
Old Flag” represent a new achievement 
in the literature of the prison-house. 
We do not know that its counterpart exists. 
It required trained abilities, mental aptitude, 
skillful penmanship, patience and good nature. 

Many curious and wonderful creations attest 
the efforts of prisoners to counteract the tedium 
of compulsory idleness. Articles of use, and 
adornment, wrought from wood, bone and 
metal, or woven with hair or fibre, ingenious 
in design, and elaborate in construction, made, 
by diligent fingers, unaided by instruments of 
precision, are not uncommon. Primarily the 
incentive in most instances is personal:—to 
banish depressing contemplation of misfor¬ 
tunes from a mind thus occupied by an exact¬ 
ing handiwork. They largely represent the 
skill of prisoners held, in more or less solitary 
confinement, and are the work of those ac¬ 
cused, or convicted, of crime. 

The newspaper, “The Old Flag,” which this 
memorial commemorates, was the altruistic 
effort of a captured United States officer to 
ameliorate the mental condition of seventy-one 
other officers, and many enlisted men, of the 
Union army, confined with himself in the Con¬ 
federate “prison pen” at Camp Ford, Tyler, 
Texas, in 1 864. They were not criminals, nor 
accused of crime, but by the mischance of war 
made military prisoners while loyally engaged 
in campaigning to re-establish the dominance 
of their country’s flag. The stockade at Camp 
Ford later held a much larger population than 
at the time of the newspaper “era,” but never 
attained the horrible and infamous reputation 


of that at Andersonville and Salisbury. That 
there was kindness shown, and appreciation 
expressed, is manifested in the sincere words of 
the poem— 

“To Mrs. Col. R. T. P. Allen (the wife of the 
Confederate commanding officer). 

“All kindly acts are for the dear Lord’s sake, 
And His sweet love, and recompense they 
claim; 

‘I was in prison’—thus our Saviour spake— 
‘And unto me ye came.’ 

“So, lady, while thy heart with mother’s love, 
And sister’s pity, cheers the captive’s lot, 
Truth keeps her record in the courts above, 
And thou art not forgot. 

* * * * * * 
“And may each cheering hope and soothing 
word 

That thou to us, sad prisoners, hast given, 
Recalled by Him, who all our prayers hath 
heard, 

Bring thee reward in Heaven.” D*** 

“The Old Flag” was edited without scissors 
or paste, printed without type, movable or 
immovable, without cylinder or mechanical 
power, and circulated without assistance from 
carrier or post-office. 

Captain William Henry May, Twenty-third 
Connecticut Infantry, was editor, general staff, 
printer, business manager, distributor, proprie¬ 
tor, and the company. In modern parlance, 
he was “it.” 

It was an expensive paper, notwithstanding 
its “terms of subscription.” Tradition reports 
that each individual copy brought to the enter¬ 
prising captain, five dollars in gold, which in 





ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

From the original painting in possession of 
Dr. George Loring Porter 


HISTORY OF “THE OLD FLAG’—(Continued) 


that locality, at that time, was worth many 
thousand per cent, premium, yet when the 
business was wound up, all that the editor could 
show for his multifarious labors, was “three 
copies of the paper.” The “terms” were “cash 
in advance.” The story runs that someone in 
camp had a “half-eagle” of good United States 
coinage. This was loaned among the different 
“messes,” to be deposited with the editor until 
the paper was returned to him, after it had 
been read by, or to, the entire camp. In their 
monotonous lives the advent of each number 
was an important event. “The winter of their 
discontent” was thus temporarily warmed by 
a joyous summer atmosphere of humor and 
wit, pathos, irony and romance. 

The captain tells his own story: “ ‘The Old 
Flag’ was published upon a sheet of unruled 
paper, in imitation of print, a steel pen being 
employed. By this slow process, but one copy 
could be issued of each number, which was 
read aloud at the various cabins, and when all 


had read, or heard it read, it was returned by 
the ‘subscriber’ to the ‘office of publication.’ 
But one aim ever actuated the proprietor in 
this undertaking, which was to contribute, as 
far as possible, towards enlivening the monot¬ 
onous, and, at times, almost unbearably event¬ 
less life of Camp Ford—and to cultivate a 
mutual good feeling between all. Contribu¬ 
tions were solicited upon matters of local in¬ 
terest, stories, advertisements, etc., and many 
good jokes were perpetrated upon each other, 
which were received purely in that light by the 
victims, and were the occasion of much enjoy¬ 
ment. Naught in these columns embodied 
personal ill feeling towards anybody, and I 
desire to certify that the warmest affection and 
mutual kindness were unanimous with all the 
prisoners.” 

There is little doubt that this unique enter¬ 
prise largely contributed to such a happy con¬ 
dition, and a perusal of its pages will justify 
this claim. 





CAPTAIN 




'3JU^Z) 


Past Commander-in-Chief 
Grand Army of the Republic 




HISTORY OF 


THE LATE 

CAPTAIN WILLIAM H. MAY 

- BY - 

HON. LYNN W. WILSON 

-$€- 


T HE Great Rebellion surpassed all the wars 
of the ages. It was the latest strife, 
upon the newest ground, in an age of 
invention. South fought against North. 
Families were divided. More than a mil¬ 
lion men, many more, were called to arms. 
The flower of the nation’s youth responded 
to the call. Brother fought against brother, 
and son against father. Out of the sweat 
and ruck and blood men of giant capaci¬ 
ties made names that will last forever. 
The histories of the war are catalogues of the 
names of these men and their deeds, the battle¬ 
fields where they directed the massed soldiery, 
and ordered the thunder-throated cannon to 
belch forth death. It is the best that history can 
do. But the war was not fought by these 
alone, and could not have been so fought, but 
by these and the numberless humbler ones, 
whose names are recorded on the enlistment 
roll. They are the warp and woof of that 
great fabric, and it will be well if here and 
there, in some sketch, or passing tale, or brief 
biography, the stories of some of them are 
written for the benefit of posterity. 

And so this tale, here to be told in limited 
space, concerns one who until quite recently 
walked the streets of Bridgeport, Connecticut, 
a figure, grey-bearded, somewhat bent and not 
at all heroic, a fact not surprising, for it is of 
the nature of strong deeds and duty strenu¬ 
ously done to break down the physical man, so 
that the hero’s mien and noble gait is largely 
reserved for actors and the like. 

This is the plain, unvarnished tale of Captain 
William H. May, soldier, editor, inventor, now 
enlisted with that army of brave men who have 
passed on. 

Men being what they are in the first flush of 
youth, what more likely to make man laggard 
when the trumpets blow, than the dawning of 
a strong affection; nay, for one whose troth 
has been plighted, and all accomplished of 
dearest hope except the fixing of the wedding 
day? 


The call to arms being sounded, would one 
then much blame a man should he at least wait 
Until the draft before putting off his clothes of 
citizen to don the nation’s blue? 

But when his country needed him no soft¬ 
ness was in the mood of the young man, May. 
No phase of reluctance was manifested in his 
action. 

He was already a merchant and had a goodly 
business, in the prosaic line of oils and paints. 
But there was no lingering. Using his store 
for a recruiting office, he, with his friend, J. C. 
Stevens, afterward Lieutenant Stevens, called 
for volunteers. 

The result was a goodly band of young men, 
eager, strong and courageous, who elected Wil¬ 
liam H. May their captain. The enlistment 
had consumed the two months of July and 
August in 1 862. 

The election was confirmed by the authori¬ 
ties in charge of such matters, and it came to 
Captain May on September 1, 1 862. 

The day was one of great joy, mingled with 
sadness. For upon that day he was married to 
the woman of his choice. She was Isabella A. 
Mills, daughter of Lucius David Mills, jr., who 
was the first jailor of Bridgeport, and later pilot 
on the steamer Bridgeport, running between 
Bridgeport and New York. The parting was 
soon. 

The company was almost immediately 
ushered into service. Called to New Haven 
with the other companies of the Twenty-third 
Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers, the com¬ 
pany was moved with the regiment to Oyster 
Bay, and there encamped for two months while 
its members were drilled and whipped into such 
shape as might make them a strong instrument 
for the crushing of rebellion. Indefatigable in 
this work of preparation was Captain May, 
who became well beloved of his men, who were 
ever ready to recognize in a leader the spirit 
which spares not from effort and is untiring in 
the performance of duty. Two years, lacking 
a day or two, he was in the service of his 
country, though not of it, as the facts will show. 





COMRADE 



HISTORY OF CAPT. WILLIAM H. MAY—(Continued) 


In November of 1862 the regiment was 
ordered to New Orleans, and assigned to the 
Department of the Gulf. 

In the routine of a soldier in charge of men, 
his time was passed until the momentous June 
20, 1 863—momentous to him—when he was 
captured at Terre Bonne, La., by rebel forces 
under the command of General Dick Taylor, 
who cut off Brasher City from New Orleans, 
by a sudden raid, during which he succeeded 
in cutting the New Orleans railway. 

The entire company was captured during 
this raid, but the raiders did not get Captain 
May at the moment, for the reason that he was 
on sick leave and sheltered in the home of a 
Southern gentleman named Hackney. Shortly 
after Company I was taken, somebody gave 
the rebel officers information that “a Yankee 
captain” would be found at Hackney’s house. 
Hackney tried in the meantime to persuade 
Captain May to put on citizen’s clothes, change 
his name, pose as another man, and thus fool 
the rebels. 

Captain May, sick as he was, sturdily refused 
to resort to these means. To his good South¬ 
ern friend he promptly replied: 

‘‘No. If I am to be taken, it will be in my 
true colors, as Captain May, of Company I, 
Twenty-third Regiment, Connecticut Volun¬ 
teers, and as nobody else.” 

His experience was to be long, dreary and 
painful. For fourteen months he was to be 
confined in a rebel prison. His durance was 
in Camp Ford prison, Texas, in which he was 
confined in June, 1863, and in which he re¬ 
mained until July, 1 864, before his release was 
effected by exchange, and he emerged, a mere 
shadow of his former self, broken in health if 
not in spirit. 

In the diary of events which he kept during 
a portion of the time appears the following 
entry: 

“With me, probably the most important 
event was my capture and long imprisonment 
in Texas. Suffering the pangs of hunger, ex¬ 
posure to all kinds of weather with scant 
clothing to cover one’s nakedness—the horrors 
of a vermin-infested camp of thousands of 
prisoners—these hardships leave an impression 
on my mind after the lapse of 46 years, that 
over 1 3 months of imprisonment was the most 
important event in my military history.” 

It was in prison that the heroic quality of 
Captain May’s courage was manifested. For 
all courage is not of battle, and there are other 
cowards besides those who run under fire. 


One of thousands, Captain May, by his 
splendid spirits, his fine vivacity, his tenderness 
for others, and the exercise of certain gifts that 
he had, became distinguished among his fel¬ 
lows, so that hundreds of them in after years 
remembered him to call him blessed. 

Captain May ever had a penchant for jour¬ 
nalism. He loved to be in the current of 
events, and to chronicle the happenings of his 
community, coloring the story with his own 
strong views and keen opinions. 

As early as 1 837, he had issued a little news¬ 
paper, in Bridgeport, in conjunction with Col¬ 
onel Julius W. Knowlton, now a member of 
the Bridgeport Board of Assessors, which they 
called The Morning Horizon. The sheet was 
born before its time, but the memory of it was 
one of the home memories, and while time 
hung heavy on his hands he loved to think of 
it, and perhaps longed fondly to be home again 
with the bride of a few days whom he had left 
behind. 

Then occurred an idea, which was executed, 
or at least begun, almost as soon as it had come 
to him. Among Captain May’s other gifts, 
was that he was an excellent penman. He 
could write both legibly and fine, so that his 
handiwork might almost be said to excel the 
printer’s art; certainly for condensation it did 
so! 

The result was a periodical which afterwards 
became nationally famous and which remained 
and is unique of its kind. He began the issue 
of a little paper, which was called “The Old 
Flag.” It was written entirely by himself with 
microscopic fineness, and the copies of it were 
passed from hand to hand, and all the news of 
the prison, and such as filtered in from the 
outside world, was communicated to the thou¬ 
sands within the prison borders. 

What that little paper was to those boys in 
blue, hungry, and half sheltered and scantily 
clothed, and distant from their loved ones in 
that rebel prison, only those who have so suf¬ 
fered can tell. But no newspaper has ever 
since been printed that was one-half so wel¬ 
come as were the casual copies of Captain 
William H. May’s “The Old Flag.” 

Only three copies of the unique journal were 
printed, and are yet in existence among the 
papers which Captain May left behind him, 
with other old war documents which he valued 
highly as keepsakes, but the true value of which 
he did not realize. 




oryc 


THE LATE MAJOR 


Past Commander 

Department of Connecticut, G. A. R. 



THE LATE 

CAPTAIN WILLIAM H. MAY 

“GOING” 








THE LATE 

CAPTAIN WILLIAM H. MAY 

“RETURNING” 


Note:—The three original copies of “The Old Flag” were concealed under his shoulder-straps. 



HISTORY OF CAPT. WILLIAM H. MAY—(Continued) 


And these copies were preserved in a unique 
way, for when the news came that his exchange 
was to be accomplished, Captain May sought 
the Confederate commandant and begged per¬ 
mission to go through the lines with his violin, 
for, being somewhat of a musician and handy 
with the most tender of musical instruments, 
Captain May desired to preserve that which had 
brought so many happy hours to the im¬ 
prisoned soldiers and to himself. 

The permission was given in the form of a 
pass to Captain May and his violin, enjoining 
all in the service of the Confederate States to 
give unobstructed passage. 

But securely sewed under his shoulder-straps 
nestled the three copies of “The Old Flag.” 
Within the violin Captain May placed relics of 
the camp that he much wished to preserve. 

His homeward journey thus made easy, he 
returned to Bridgeport, no longer in physical 
condition to fight in the service of his country, 
and resumed the daily tasks of the civilian’s 
life. 

Thus ended the epic of his life, the great 
moments when he moved a figure in the gigan¬ 
tic panorama of internecine war, doing his part 
in the great tragedy, or somewhat more, as 
thousands of other Americans did whose deeds 
have been but scantily recorded by history’s 
parsimonious pen. 

Reading this scant biography, one is bound 
to say, “Here was a man.” 

And since to the making of a man many 
generations contribute, there is the custom that 
demands some knowledge of the forbears of 
those who have achieved distinction. 

Captain May’s father in the direct line was 
John May, who came to America at the be¬ 
ginning of the Revolutionary War, having en¬ 
listed in the British army as a soldier. 

But his mind had become imbued with sym¬ 
pathy for the Americans, since he was an 
ardent follower of some of those great British 
statesmen who championed the American 
cause, and, after a service of two or three years, 
peremptorily abandoned the army of His Ma¬ 
jesty, George Third, and became a fugitive 
with a price upon his head. 

He had been a chairmaker under his father 
in Dublin, and after the war remained in 
America, where he carried on the business of 
chairmaking. He married Nancy Shaw, a 
daughter of Henry Shaw, after whom the hero 
of this biography was named. 


And of this sturdy stock was born Henry 
May, September 23, 1803. He was a man of 
parts in his day, and wielded influence in his 
neighborhood. He was the first depot agent 
at Newtown for the Housatonic Railroad, and 
Newtown was in those days a much more im¬ 
portant commercial center than it is now. Re¬ 
moving to Bridgeport, he built one of the first 
houses in East Bridgeport, in the section east 
of Congress Street bridge on William Street. 
He died in his 88th year. He married Abigail 
Gray, who was born at Brookfield, Conn., 
February 13, 1807. She was a school teacher 
in Brookfield before her marriage. 

Of this union was born William H. May, at 
Newtown, Conn., March 31, 1838. He died 
February 24, 1910, at his home in Bridgeport, 
Conn. 

Captain May married Isabella A. Mills, 
daughter of Lucius David Mills, Jr., who was 
the first jailor of Bridgeport and afterward pilot 
of the steamer City of Bridgeport, running be¬ 
tween Bridgeport and New York, under Cap¬ 
tain Charles Weeks. 

Captain and Mrs. May had eleven children, 
the first, Helen, being born during the absence 
of Captain May at the front. This first fruit 
of their wedlock died, alas, while Captain May 
was in the rebel prison at Camp Ford. 

But one child is left, a daughter, Mrs. Mary 
L. Rich, who resides with her widowed mother 
in Bridgeport, Conn. 

As a boy Captain May attended Sellick’s 
private school on Elm Street, Bridgeport, and 
afterward the old Barnum School. 

He was known as a bright boy, and was 
early the possessor of a pretty, but genial wit, 
which was afterward the basis of his news¬ 
paper work, and gave spice and readers to the 
journals which he edited and published. 

His earliest venture was The Morning 
Horizon, to which reference has already been 
made. It is remembered by a few old resi¬ 
dents of Bridgeport as an unusual and sparkling 
publication which was welcomed in many 
homes. Its assistant publisher, Colonel Julius 
W. Knowlton, is still living, and is a member 
of the Board of Assessors of Bridgeport. 

Shortly after returning home from the war, 
in 1 864, Captain May invented a process for 
curing wood, and applied the invention to the 
manufacture of piano sounding boards. A 
company to promote the invention was formed. 




HISTORIAN 




THE LATE 

CAPTAIN “BILLY” MAY 



MRS. WILLIAM H. MAY 








HISTORY OF CAPT. WILLIAM H. MAY—(Continued) 


Among the officers of the company were some 
of the best-known men in Bridgeport, includ¬ 
ing P. T. Barnum, J. W. Knowlton, D. M. 
Sherwood, William S. Knowlton, William P. 
Cole and H. P. Stevenson. 

The company for a time did much business 
and manufactured their sounding boards for 
use in Steinway, Weber and other famous 
pianos. The invention was regarded as a 
marvelous addition to the quality of tone of 
the instruments. After disposing of his in¬ 
terests in the sounding board company, Captain 
May devoted himself entirely to his publi¬ 
cations. 

The first of these saw the light in 1 868. It 
was a satirical and humorous publication called 
The Boneville Trumpet. A little later its 
name was changed to The Town Crier, which 
so remained until 1871, when the name was 
again changed to The Weekly Budget. For 
five years the Budget was published to an in¬ 
creasing clientele. Then Captain May, de¬ 
siring to enlarge the scope of his influence, 
discontinued The Budget and began The 
Bridgeport Sun. This publication rivaled the 
Danbury News by its brilliancy and the excel¬ 
lence of its wit. It became famous throughout 
the country. Its paragraphs were reproduced 
in the State papers and in many of the leading 
journals of the United States. 


For 15 years, until 1890, The Sun was pub¬ 
lished with regularity, until he sold it. But, 
restless outside of his chosen vocation, Captain 
May, within the year, inaugurated what proved 
to be his last and best publication, “The Illus¬ 
trated Star.” One of the original features of 
this paper was that all its copy and each of its 
cuts were written, or made, by Captain May. 
The Star was issued until the time of his death. 
It was widely read and much quoted. The 
humor of its editor grew in kindliness as the 
years advanced. There was no malice in his 
witticisms. His editorial comment was that of 
a man who knows the world and the weakness 
of human nature, but was tinged with a strong 
sympathy, colored with irony. 

When Captain May laid down the responsi¬ 
bilities of life he had been editor of his own 
periodicals for 53 years, which is probably a 
longer term of service in such a capacity than 
any other man in Connecticut has known. 

He, himself, looked upon “The Old Flag” as 
his most unique adventure in the realms of 
journalism, as indeed it was. Doubtless “The 
Old Flag” will be a monument to his memory 
after the glory of more pretentious newspapers 
is buried in the dust of centuries. 

Here concludes the story of a plain Ameri¬ 
can citizen who did a soldier’s duty to the end. 




THE SHOULDER-STRAPS UNDER WHICH THE THREE COPIES 
OF “THE OLD FLAG” WERE SECURELY SEWED AND THUS 
WERE CARRIED SAFELY “THROUGH THE LINES” AND HOME 
BY CAPTAIN MAY 




ELIAS HOWE, JR. 


From the painting in 


possession of Elias Howe, 
Bridgeport, Conn. 


Post, No. 3 


































































































ELIAS HOWE, Jr., POST, NUMBER THREE 


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CAPTAIN MAY’S COMRADES 




























































ENGRAVING OF THE ORIGINAL 
PASS THROUGH THE LINES 
WHICH ENABLED CAPTAIN MAY TO JOIN, UNMOLESTED, 
HIS COMRADES OF THE UNION ARMY 







Vol 1 . 



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--, w ,- A ^hc drives u/ron Cojofedemfe-eorji, 

gee, and tk* unl*ri-{fie«L exile., Jr et .,»«*'>> w * V av * “ ^" 

K^ve. swome fe uPkold our m^nonl-l ‘ were bunj to au 3 . ^ / 

’Vn.ous TresidL^r^" irv k<s aenevous rVL’y^, u I'oTT^iyer s'ra-ng. 

e-ndeavor to ^cti Jl warUAs JJ* ! kav * ^ no I 
for kJS OWi\. SuJapOTpi Irv l»<« 'A'OTtls ^ TjAILEY vv« uve U ^ 
of Tk« new uW. orldlval meiro, No Lawyer y*tf. fl*'- 
uf* Ike kead. of our ediUri^d Col-j * ee f ^ 

amn, L»rx g ^ F<W^ t TWW«« we K.«. A- 

No SuCNKT K».V« W<t to 
VVe Lave a C OEj vv« 

do a.g'ood Turn. wLtntver' 

AoaMS kere,<*.iub nwk ±. 

Beea.u 4 e ke ’3 «.ire,riJ~fr«.m, X-< . ^ 

Tko’ laeki'Kg «• Dohe,^ 


Hvelr e-jedeetL tod cm en*. dodevr* v rrL^ko we 


lav^L T« scorn ?.rv eruption of 
Tosudv vot.ran. ki«tir>^ vm^He sure 
and wi tk tke oU PaAft wra^f ed around 
tk«m,Tkej will fuec a world m arms 
jYtosfaVg Po-rdes. VV< Call up»m 
L cluifeT around our Fa a 
We knew ILoJ tkej Lav® ana cried 
Peru* Wtender mW cries for i-T. 
SwWMAn’S Loi^MOJTS- unroll tkt barnOT 

otWreoUmptun overTekUn groves, 
'flual oar > t»n*C»-r A 

' T„ Anve«L;d. 3 d^«b* frefrv. u^ 


en 

Uy ( 

stiff. 


atTe <an« 


W,'- 


"f» .e MwriNuao >e ov« WtrTB 


A Grand celebration 


C. CrOtT Ovrej A\t'V W\\WsVxTvd.O^ 
bom mo, dYcvsN^ oorvck ®f Vise Ar 


V\ lx-v <e_ 


,-nrj, 


$ tEtH EtCV» Xh 


Wftk. tke Vi oil n lately puTcUased. 
IrorTL OTie of ift a u. «.r d f or 100 
do i laYS Com federate numey (e«ju^l 
k*lC >.00 in Green.-backs here) and 
tie Banjo Messrs Mars & Ce , 
tore making , % CAPT. 'T'HomASOn S 
e.ro.ileid' FlUTF,W-^ are in hopes 
to Have ^ui to a. BaVYP by tke 2 .Z* 

of htl , Now, wr tfc tke edditf <m 

of u Singma Club, we Certllntj do 
Ttal' lock Music for a Cele — 
bratJvm o^lke Birtk-dasjot Wask- 
ingten. We. kuve eYeellenL fvd>- 
iitt Sjoeakers^ and thimfore kcp« 
Sack u Ytelelratioro W'i! OOTUC 

off. _ 

TAT -RIOT. 



5 .U 11 a. K 


^ _ 

(.Hn 


' ,<v 'c\e. a. PejCK to use «d \ 

^r>d if we had a La«b l w»«tv, 

In |s>ea.CC with UyoN twould le 3 eenTv_^ 
Tk«u^ k a .11 a-v-e f*YLot of tbisLes sweetfY- 

Ros.ns ge d icn.ha.mi e It. no •. 

Tke <jt(,«vres l~ I king of th(s rSre. 

Wc need, a h Tif/e For our PcfiE, 

We have O- < 7 kuSe , SO.d to kl\ew. 

We Lave VvodrAMIE das! fcs So. 

Wr Ko-ve a H oaa, yet ok not care, 

Tfe' have Tkerro addf likewise <X-BtAR. 
Sampson is also here on Land, 
iVo Jaw - bone tt\ 0 > ( j, in ki» Ler\ot. 
'Klttvo^^fh. the Reis here hold u [ Worse , 
Tra.-Mjo&rt~ Tkeir New* bjj Some old korst. 
Maps W. 7 k us forkful, and 
Yeh weve tvoVEnus in our land. 

1 -Aurif vvefear, (oines for Annie, — 
t^urclor^ frie-nji perhaps 'tfs Fannie, 
o: n «n There’s WhITE is also k%r*. 

Black - ha.Y« vvty Is if net ^iceer. 

And. tivCn. although we have no "Pool, 

We k*ve an £p dy, jYcsF from StkooL. 

/A tfufv i 8 le ^nyef- rail to see, 

Wi'tkin our midst - a. sin^i e fB ee. 

AUko' a, Dane , trs true, Indeed, 

We have -not with lu one cl Sweep. 

The SouJk ,'t firmly Axed, ah Us l; 

I hey vC. U h en o 01 * ^—are. bedded fast 

V( S P-dd. wilt, jotea »ur e tb cur inui, 
v e kcwE «. WaicHT, and nop «. W«orva. 

V fVT See .^ ^ y,w most aueen 

eve Woo os, y«d n of a T«ee ; s h<Te : 

Vv£EKS vve Tturnler kmig th fe Testi 

And SeveraT tVI o NT H-S. k.oive be«rx *«>■ guest 
A Fowler, Foe, our li'jf now swells. 

Not the firm of Fowler L Wells. 




I 

A. 




































































2 . 


/\ YV £l~v If \r\<r ej^Ue’s a, SoUik> tko’ 

And, *i\o'r u. £$lack*rnitk tL* know* 

We kav< a F"u Y yUrvA yet" no Ckc: ts 

^T/\e-Y 5 0 t\j* tie's w€€j< <*i©ui~ tL knee* • 

R/oU.vd IKeUl<i was no wo f ‘SC •ff Ik** nc, 

/A < pt^R wc kuve, no ifoRSE see. 
Ouy l\eu.|?£ ur <- Ok>cr\ a/ any o l cioc./f^ 

yVe Vi(A Ke Y, Gar a o Lock , ( 

And now cl ear'friends, Ike f^cf ?i &«*» 

N\'e kavt, Pc/nn ancL *3 >g, 

F 4 N IS. 


QU Q p - I— GV-• 


CorFvEJI’oNC'CNCE 

Mr.Editor_, 

1 VY?*t\ "HvrOugL live Lol- 
ulvi'vms ©1 yo tef p^jocf to not'Ce. cl ntws — 
(A*nee wlu'eU {b dft/rvg muxlv. Ti CoTru^o t 
tw taoT e-al? Pf It-e \jiu-tt\ In our violr- 
flcivn^ Geen la,tely Gou/ruL *n\tke 
lipjy& f of- ^oAUc\l , I f e,el 

of infere^h tSv ikesc 

3L t*cw^ w5h ^ *°T sV ) lU . ^ 

W > G T' a \ c t t a.tolisk.txg- 

.y, L—• * - , \V \ UO C ' ( 0 ^ 0 * NDcAy a > 

.Jua. owH ,LJj 7 *'* t 'Tg palop-rv — a>v 
»L* a a ■»-.-vUlc Ivfei/; 




vtrsju ,\w< u— h i*M'Kg WijtM* **«*. «y*tu 

. ' !. » ) (id*r, I (xrr^ *uy* tk« ^hWjw« nr «r m* 


\ ah-A — tkvc' • clw 

VICV^M-. <i 


(i !drci\ s a .6 well a^, 


<f | h Ikczv, yv/ll [ei’Tx . 

^ f ! (W. " 

' / J C.E.P. 


/ 



C ^^T| Orv ! I 


'.Vu. tos^, 

Incwe. ^omt/ o*ff tareV/. , Mor only is IW^ 
fke yy-itsh c-*'ru.|»le^e 3 r ^ c ^'^s or Pt*.^blc'n^^ 
tud fk^-re is Ko f" ■even. - 

>ee ot fairness VeteoL ; 

^ve^e arteies^ fivtwo Ikircls 

©Inaw K?ri 2 -es lUem.-' 

, If 'Hied* Sw'mollU are n©) 
slopj^^di livty yv’iH lno3^‘ ccSS'jlt-« J.lvj 
Y* o S e cL 

1 * 


Com Mur4tc/<T*uiX3. 

"Pear TuftGj 

AlUw rne To T^Ilvrn 
Ttianks TUtou^Iv molc’’ C 0 (.La" rrvn § 
to Suf^Ce^NT e-^ 6 Ntt 3 'For kls V^.T'y 
laandscnv^ pr*%'*n oE O'n-^^UoJ'F 
rte P^/JlM/^iven ly U tv U 
prisonjcjv^ or Lamp ro^d.• 

^ o «-©r frPL-^, 


ProM tlw ^l*r * |{>tt% ^cU.lbtlf. 

We i\av< v*.luciklc 4Vcfi>rrA«t#>% c{ H\<. J.«WLKrtw.VA 
of &&NKe *rui ftiv TnitvirTLS frvm c*xvtA 9o<C 
•fTwn), I-P h»w ^»|»<a.v 5 u Uw«i. if Ri'ckavdy^s 

CavdJ-) nj w«ve ia^lUi'v^ s’^kP of tVe Y«tt>k««. j^lcfvtTc 

Yil\9 friuktrvA-#^. a(- ft - *fgk.h •* tV* g>a^-tac^cb, 

Ike aUvSLwtocnv wlaek SANKf ^Wi <->n - 

6 ay l<juL aw. t* *V"(C^ l f'-Aj AV\c(. 'fivT-C© TXowI, AVvAJ 

tker© ^ avv no cLuSr %u.-r- vn« an r» f iL s<r- 
4»-*>A t»^4 of- Liivcn^ »\w/r4u3 UrVfif. 


Attention ^— We, vrouldl /twlfc. 

i/c .r T<oici<y^ u tfc* Ad verb fOnevuP of: Sew*** 

L-oy ^u-rvcL kh. a-vutt'tr ccUAnvc-rt . It i* wi'JU~ 

Jfl^aVure atwi «rv».>v<« ft«rtxu-rvc #f- *u.t M<v.J 

'from. SoUtk Ar^wi«A. , IvA-vfV-^ Ls^ tU c 
kulk of k«* fevtunve Crv tk* kxt^ fool’«t or»i.'troccllts (k«v< 
We are ptCM*d fe anrvou-^vee^ kcvt«y«T, fku.t" 

Kt kccS ttcdr IK exfe-rvfivR S • OLctfc vvj, 

arvei we ^yw>^ Will r«tV»<v« k^'* fV'lm -f »rtltr ««9 . 
We r «:<.c«nx-rw*>val «<^r ^rie>\£ls U ^U< Scc^# cv 
-fair trial. Sr#tk«v H. IV a stacoxcU R-epv*-lU«4 
U.*»vct a Pa.lvi o t— Ua 3 tV\T*^« Sotv.^ in.fki 
otv\oL Uol% 'eC t \%yd£ i^.y *wtv vO* a. Lu.cY<LU»e Po*\G*y\. 
LA.rviw, iteU'vxV fW»t de Ctvdd 

'_ J rx .fc_ A L . f_~V,:„ LT^ - _ .w 


XiQ CAXi 

Q$*23 °f imjJMftimtttf »rv out- Ikri*i‘tv^ j kro^U 

-n.trea.ie rApfoU^-. eo-i. AxCotx/i’ivvAet Ivv pletfsa^^ 


itx e^r u. 


L^‘% ctidUv^ eou.^ir^ ^ fu/^^Yus u- 3u^>encr ©r> 
til# So*/ ,t*Jr . r/J^V . ^ 

‘ l»e U k«_e arkc» - OarvL to k^s Uu.tik- >\ryx 


Wfc cewy tt>e tolLwh^ «f iT\<uhrnrrd% 

tkt. P 1-* a. to C«nortt ». f T©VVv ttt Skyo»e(ag* A 


,f 


H- e- ea.Cc 

/l>v Act irv adUL«tvo>v fe an Aet 
^ an Acl Cntitfei. Att fr Pr*V*2d~ the 


0 .nd o.teT\siv« 4 «a,i lcl«Vi£oj^ero.tZtmf <rr\pl\r^ fW U-loy d'*\JL 
C#|»,Ul ou-r Corvv V y.^. >M :t^ . -d new CUek »• rising «pp n/|e 
r.Rk Avevucvt »^cx.«ju y ( 7 CCA^f»i’-«C U( purr di.it?'* 4 y*' 1 t+*d PvJJ^/V- 

Cit 4 *en. / Captain J.D. W 4 , ktt-'y'K alle Ikat OT-B. oF 

Str^t ka.t e*nlr«^ftd (|TftK extt7\>Vr\ of klsntOUtKnv, Oin^ 
Ccmfim |o{<xtee tke cuid^tr*^ d eo^oex,- 
8 l 0 'v 9 ctor n\ I To ri't» ki* Scviu.v lar. t* dtn.ce . 

fltu%Ai\t~ tul of planting altett.c(y ctvlisfi ikv. 
er€T^»o% of Oivr wcltu^'oc 1 pc t T{ 7 w . JVTajcv A — 

a *' k ^- Cor^fki>\ W k*.vt ^rvclojfjL "Tt.uY w'l^k °- 

^uljfxv^ul ftnte j end nvu^ k cLeulj 3 terv. k 

(X 4 XC fui and. ^eyocLccetve ^uviuilt of IYotk«v^ 

IS >ncrv-e ckeeri w Tt«?x k wit-nelS tk« £tuc*fuj ea-»t w«lW 
•^^'ok wxA'l'tret* *r Aym^ omdl tetrre like. Civit»nw».tw.S 

te nU*T Je*<rtSr^ Mari *fo> Ce^C* j. U'nd. noLn^u>fL~ 

Ckc ft«ld • "kr tkef“ ofge»cU>^ l® 1 ^ 

Weve) 


..nx nnrje y±A-r**f 

C€Jat ©-f Nut* es^ Cooks to-ul Bto»xiwm\ln>'. 

Fix « Crn^'re^ o/ fkt C. ^ . A en«ccf 1 

yvo Ck«, *■ n^-tvlunecL sUall U <xd 

Vnitl^l l*vxf ; tfte aekvt fixililoL+y service of H\c 
C S . *7 A.j ka v n^j already f n»^ V 
sL'Ldi aver ffc* exemptiave u^t y w/i^k ner 

©-f e/<xrv. 21% t, j* ejc/el'-dod k 
AppYkvttL} Fei • lat. 

t ill. oufdl 6rkta o.rv Art k ng**>*«. 
w./l aile. -hodt&L Tiiale <3i/ia</n ^ •Uxtr ttw 7 kJ- 
‘tavy 5 <rvice of Kc* OlS, 

‘TA # of tke C<^.of A . dL» tna^ 

rt^at odte IcdJtxL rw alt ^layej. Ittwcen. tke 
or 2 /P «rvd «4>0 jaa.rs sko.ll le anrolleeL. 

tke servlet of tkt C.S. b IVe 

*>K*nF ef 5^ o-o-c Iwk Ifeis * IvkII T^ x ol“ 

s® C«rv<ft w.«^L a« to d»j)TWt ancf 

in € y%7' ‘ftryiaul** *i ^tuV rtvly |u.Me<rr/~ 

^ 4K^uj five mly rerma-tnvnv StTvervh 

{ke pi^lvfK.lc'ovv 

i 7‘^ U ^ tkc lexjt olslu^(e U tt%.e 

P rt, ^ c)r5 rt-m^ved^aiwl, o©.y 
•^mcers arvoCrn.4t>\ W i*i| 4 dctv le fo 

jo. n, mar C©rtvrrvc^tx ^3 


pyppty tncow>«x^t>-n«T\7 of tie f n«- Otits gkoc^kl. not 
ke n^gktted Jrv ovyytrvtl<r. 'TUe wdlc jt t< 

r , ."'^id yviliy «Jua-*\Y*.£« 1 r wtj «nv«L »V 4 rtv«.»<f*^x w‘‘lk g^Teod" 
plto.lo.r< fkcJ we notice /ke. leawtikA-l model of Weed — 
SCU .LtCurf, (aTe(j txeeceded, tj Co^'F of T'» - 'ftk Avenwe 

*J V Hc» fertt-v of an. arm cJveir for |er4»e>dot%o-*x U F 
I», *tr*oo^rr<^ leek ©nd. of v*rk 

*rt trv^ lc e^KtncoC a- >u«.stet-'pclc^ 


iv^p»vt»r^* ccncL «UsCo>orr«e *P »u.-v 4 |t, Sonor 

tf 5 -Aj, de4«rv«| «. Lj^V JtLcc Yi> luf \tc0ces5 i*H fk© 
^erfeeii* tk% M.n^oolwv* AsUo* k a^Ue» ’ 4 k.‘« 

tnott* and (•ke'Byeow, ke dcelt w> IU, 

rke .'tU» ofa^fe-mo ?U of<r>c«^b 

Wkeyc^-rnlr^ See^-fo-P WxeUvn^ *u.-va^^ ^ 

We tSwet kc *^ ! l *ke Iccetiiwed Uj <> Cor^rK^^^r^ 

wLek ,ft 5 w< o-ll k-now, *«o ledlj p^ p>, ^0 0^0 . 


c„ 6 „ O^^-a-.T .cC,-T,^ w ^ ;iV 

P! ^i?"' c{ Cam* ami. a. -.v^Jr 

<tow 

_ _ Tcirve>v( 

vsiiu 

awxic^i 


!xirL'hU^ of Ca/rue oxnd cc tx 

tf # 7^ ^ We f tr > ^ of X« l^e 

VVe 7 + CtnwtpJlWs. ^TvTof a. lad-move oenlfo 

jou-r •ooWj wim. awMft: “—^ 


C#MMi/W<OmT| O^y. 


«T^ _, w „. 

o THe Lo\t©r of thc. Olo FlaQj 

f+ f-i_ ) a Sir, Alloy v Yn-O 

1 I c ’ vK 4 .'of jjoiit paper oe.lt 

of iUuifc t puiUo -wel- 

are u.8 skowiv llv leaving u.v\eove>«t ax-vol 

u.n^w.oLTele.1 a. /VeruUx Urw<e^V>-iv«.tX 
Uence «.wci rt, e J WnJ,-rt^U 

Son"* Atawacekccs^te/ 


CHESS PROBLEM 

By LYON AND LOG*AN. 


White, to Mate in 3 Moves. 


«/ w/ark m k«» 


/!■» 


e of THE ^lp 'll’,' 


WANTED! 500 C(m„*.U 

— Ge«.p prefe,rr<4.—.o^h'TTtv S0f\p 

Mamufactoky^ ,, . 

n* nL ey. 

—--- -- 

A BATH -HOUSE. 

* 

An, «ta, tlislvnvenxL ■fov B alk . Yl^ UYt vL 
lato'Jrrs fr r 'P*’ 5e5 

Wtkye WWl-^ wtY ' Suff.c^erv-r. Akmr IS 

^KCV^k t* tk, QCt-vnpyy xw-eiv C‘ VV jn-V k in ^-J"to^w} 



^XHvc mo>7 'rw^xati-rkj peice w©rk 
oii.Tr f.Ttum*. ti UUcU. Since, oar 3T<VV aE Fo-rcL 8<rr. 
ou^lv ,J a. fee}- of CHE?a'MeH rnad« 

lj It. John VVpcoWARD. T^k e.j are of kolly-vvtoi 
anaL finvutktJ. in. splenclvdl taste. He ka.* utJ- 
reocoly kee?-L, offcreA a* Fair ao ftTd, m 
7n.or ty — T* : L«neolrv Crrc<tn. 

—* -■ p »• 1 - ■■-■ - ■ 

JP7* Our aged ar\A VrvucoU. esteem^ecL fri«l\cG, 
BuiKLEY, \ve a-re. fain-ui, to amouTve-e, 

Iclt^ n\et V*l tL, <ju l<uL accident- In rk© tV<^^ 

of Wifi f>of hv it, titR/t IT * l1v 

Case a. ted of l*ve Coa,Ls. 'T^e "fooh is 

tt©iT\g well, liowever, and will Sv<rty~ ie a,$ 

909 Ji cls “owm ofker Ttvo-tv? fcot^ 


Qua 71 7\a7nte> &f Ike "old FLAa _wkick 
will U kiwed. March Utj^gif^wHi U’ik 
Ui\. ent^e/ rxew dLra^l^ w# kouving received 
■»ew"7Lp^ from Ike F&uoxdrx or J.CiNNoR 

^SoN, of N,Y! Tki, vuouL /o ^rtu(lA 

wittv S^ce,9iv Ink ^ vvkiek cLes 7 \©(^-appear 
pon. ^ qi\kee \t>a p€r 


to \avVe" w at Uvpon ^ qnkta 




-.<Vw 
















































































































































































































































CO I— O PL.A GI-, 


3. 


‘ I— 0 rtg Vvio.^ i t~ ~W~OL y-«t 1 


NVednas, Fdrwary 17 ftt. 18&4*, 


by u.a. telegraph. 

PROCLAMATION! 

In viVtafe of H\e a^U'flv.oirt.t ore me 
vested ovr tie. ConstitdL(>K_, I keredy on- 
de-r an^eieettoi-L </ (Sta+'e Civil otfitOS 
L r j ° ^EXAQ, fcaicl oncers to 

7 4/*S>Ar ^al mkakUds 

°( ike Said State, tmw rei»d«T\t at Camp 
Ford., and fio nsfa-t^b.t\a one fcdfc of 

tiie entire Lyad. papttlfldToix west" of U. 

Rio Ct rA-urfe- 'T ke /foils will ke 0Pe7ieJ 

ok Monday,^® 22 it. of Pei, 185% oP 
ccrtcL Ctftvbixae c?|pe.H. urx.tit 
5u .yt-se-t of fAe same dw. 

' " Tke officers ti le elected. are a, 

Governor, Liea-tenan't" Crover-nciVj Sec- 

reGLmj <?f Stsiiij T>casurer- J arut Sa¬ 
ber/ ruendan. t of l nsanc H os pi tai^ arjl 
Attorney den^rai ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 

Prestdeivt; 

Wm.H.ScvvrtflD, 

■Sgg.*e lar^ o f . 

This day we Spread, tyevrvTexan Ireeaet 

tke old. 4 ani\w ie 4 Lat ti every Arner'iearx, 


Heart. Its silver stars and Crimson, strip 
will dortty gladden Ike expectant eyas or 
X Cjcciiv hcCtriots wko kaye long ntoam-ed. 
Tkeiv lis appearance, as tke wkarvg-decdle 
avoanaettv for Her tome . Ou.r gl*- 

y/0O6 ensign, wi)/ arise upenx tkes« tc- 
niglded jctople as a keacon-of Lope 
tAa storm - leaden mariner, and it" kour 
Axed, and inflo i tie p’arjoose to nval it" ti 
Ike loyal mat/" ktad. of ttus oar scot” 
of ^overnmerd', and to defy tjte. oomtined 
kwts of treason t* Hot" oaf <x single,str 
or erase a Solitary st>i|»e. VYkii*, otvr . 

all Coi\oM.ercng Tvo-rtKern. arnvj ^ ccnolen 
its yen owned. c.oin-nxotvulerS^i* ma-rJtij^j 
along oar sea-side sands w/tfv fix -e. 
slow and. intrepid. l"Teai. of CaPT.J. D’s 

I7xale„ toward a. peck of Corn.-fodder 1 , 

W £ } Ike O-dva ■nee gaard. of^likcrty And. 
infett^cncej wilt oecap>Nj tk«. Hierm.opj'Ut 
cf C&mjp Ford, and. A old. Ike foe at 
ku NJ WiH o ter lives, our f ovfu.nts,tvttdj 
oar 5 acred Sword-knot* We ttvtreforjj 
Call apo n. oar lt>\(o.l f ellovv - citizens , as 

Itie in estimable tlc^ 5,r '-4 5, e f 


Ik 


vatu e 


good governrneixE Send in Ttverr sat- 
serip/'ti'cm'i to Tke Oi_oFi_Ae" crv\ee t N.B.~No 

Cor i\~cLogtr C-arrcncy accejded • 


£0lT<>fr$ CttAlft. 

^v, did tkink of ixamiv^ tki 3 dpart- 
Ywnf of ou,r jeapier tke Editor'» 
Clair, tat O-t, we Seated oujrselves 
OU-T Coaree, keerd, sliver-iottrmed sfcol, 
7ni.ni.vs and- CLv^kiotu, tt>« aUurd 

*• 1^ of Saying ea»v ckair arrested 
oar joeix in. fk, a.«f of So inditing 'd 
and Vo tier ttsa-TV kave au|dea6«?\t 
a kwudmg in oovr cotovnans as 

we drop R 1 *® Term altogetker. 

Ay\cL still., w e Uav^. rtofioix, 
oar coarse teru^or ito^ m igki witt 
as wk fratk U termed, oar easy 
cke« v as tkad of Tnatv$ an editor 
r/iftuw oar fcn^wkoie Yxx atavany jed 
is cuskioixed w/lk softest velver^ 
rvko3« caves ^And, une«Vm«J5 «f minci 
— B. Us Du» , » tLr'irijg kinx in. tk* face 

and kT» Salserilers l«.tikwev<d _v«ry- 
in tkeiv payments,and a tkoto OAxcL 
otter of me jr<Wns»} eomwen- ti tke 
edi&ri of Vnoder-n, papers^ we >iav 
fkak after Considering tkaf fact we 
m-lgkt Wi/t mo-re trv.tk dtmnnlWi 
an. Easy Ckaiv , f ov waaxperi- 
e7xoe none, of tkese edifeviod grievances 


M ISCELM^EOUS. 


Conundrum ' V\T* n ti, So uW CVnU 
erac-y iiKe a tea-kettle? 

B«rau.»e tkeBlack is at tk» Ltto 
oi if, and txo/low wiflvin. 


lorrv. 


T ktl'f«v, > ) Q,y K Tri 

it was Ike oolever o 


wne ^ r ' , 6'-^rt» wUUtn 
ik«w C.lotkiixg ot Hie 


-vr jflc VtT- 

Tnin w/uek So Seared oar forces m'/das 


Why are Texa*, 3 to-ft troops h|<» (;dt 

^mu i it- ^^ ^ecaase tke x -rexn 

W i itv ii Hit leltnx o . 


Wky are t\/l rtCKupEN'; Consc-vt^ts like 
tke Kelel papers ? k^s.''B«ctuv*t *n\ey 
Can. not le d. 

ejoended ajOirvv-. 


W^Ky /# Ri ckar dson 7 % Gayalr^ ff>x tke 
coa-ftt like a m<viv wiffc, Tke. T«»n~- 
ad\e..’ Arx'i.-Becavase tke^ t 6 na U 
oe relieved. ^ 


AV^ky is (t^PT .oloHC^soty \ e?xdea.vor'n> 


T, ~ " —.wr.uv g,r<wa.noe^ W hj( is 0APT .o/shNSona endearorn>c> 
>xoTk0n4 tT worry aW tat wkc^fe Oompty vyitlt tke (demand. S ol dxrtst¬ 
are o file oar nae-rt 'Vw /anI ty ? An?.-Bceaase k«. is «.v deayorlr^ 


we are get oar Tx.-e.rd 'ineaj. f 

— aisd as a aoxeroL Hurya 
15 yneaU ^ 


Lews as fme a 5'ega.r* 

tastld 


Before u.8 l 

ftte inosh fastlcleoas Yankee, 
ftoadd. desire tiT Sraoke ; kere voter* 
J«^ars are as kl^k as per kan- 

dred; and. ttuo a presesd tr> art 
Wko woudd te d ev€ It! 
Zt was m artaf aetvvved entire 

ont of oar •nei^kt.rd MR,W>«i.sif v 

wltose advertisenierd- wi/l ke fou n J 
lie another CoItxvnrv. ( 

Griv& lunt a call. 3 ireoke. 

kinv C'-xt" J 


Turn 


w and to * 1 1 


O^&R Phuagv.- 

* 3uR, - ..... . -- 

rt ^.n-vir tllu.r 5 and iff ytAj. vvil rite 'me 

p- 5<Xivd Sa, ami if app rife 

i wW pa. \fou. far ^car 1>u.l>t'/ll " 1 
yyil ^iv ass lx/ as levin, do 1 u.t$ far 1. 
I a/n, sur, yewurs trewli, 

9 Vixu. i Jk ; Yrxamx. 


VValch^s Lotteries.- No.32. wot* 

* -namler keld lj Lt. Robens, 

wko drew tke kand*W Rino made 

My. lAlllsoiv last week. 

Balarday evenim^ anotkev r/ng 
Was pal ap ky tke L o tt E R Y-MflrN, 
and drawiv kilnself. 


l_We kR.Ve, aS tke otalncm of tkT* note w'rll 
oerceive, pat kv kl s owix nde as kvi. 
wrote it Ulieymg evvr 5 d vts Unaile to aMk o.S 
^tfeeting arx appeal Cl. 8 oar Correi i°ond- 
ent kimself kas. £-d.^) a 


Vote Early ! ea<Ltke TVesioUkL- 

roclavncdon., and Kxmervtlo tke 2.2^ of 

‘If .vca Lave net l 


fclraayy! Lt ^OW nave net be« ?x 
ma^Xe a voter, <»'c ot once before tke 
I BoarO., vvKi'ok CokLe/sts o? Messrs ShE-RFRY, 
jnoSEMS and m£RY,an<L Urnotlt ond 


married, 


(tv tk/s borrou^iv oru ti xc 1st 
DLSly by Rev. X>. Gtiuette, Mr, 

' VV. Lyqini^ o| B^ttasUtown , IV/. J. 

ouxd M in .C. El. Page of' A',* 

p Lxc e. 

^ <xc -bnc>vviedoie tke 

reC Y/f^ **- peice of 1 ’ fke 

Wedding Cake (corn- (weoJd.J 


. ■ 













































4-. 


EZ Q L. P F~ L . 


LIST OF PRISONERS. 


UC«.J.a LEAKE. 20r« IOWA. 

Lr.Cm HOSE, 26" I NO. 

Maj. R.C. AMTHONY, U. R.[.C^vau»v. 

M/'j JOHN GRAY, ITS - N.Y.V. 

Cou.CLrst.C.NOTT, W N.Y.V. 

« LS-SURREL, 4t0. MASS. V*U. 

Lt.Cou AJ.H.DUGANNfi, 17* N.Y.V. 
Capt.F.NOBLETT, JUst. IN D. 
CaW.^- CLBAILEY, 2'3o.C.V. 

.. J. SAN FOR O, “ M 
“ Wm.H. MAY, “ 

*f J.R JENKINS, “ 

A.O.MOP MISS. “ , 

*• /\ WELLS, “ 

“ yv.f COE, 17 6 N.Y.V. 

“ W. ADAMS, tr IOWA. 

“ R.H. STOTT, 2 b' <ND. 

“ N.A. LOGAN, “ 

“ A. ALLEN. l, f . RtuhU.S.V. 

“ F KLDVAN Tine, 13l N.Y.V. 

“ A.N. PROCTOR, 4-Zp. Mass. 

“ Oftro.StfEARlYE, c ‘ “ 

" Cl, SAVAGE. 

“ e.COLTER,2cAMOWA. 

“ D.TORREY, “ 

« VV.J. WALLACE, £3 " IND. 

LlR>JV J. Wou<ivy 0 .r«l £?• C-V- 
.. J. F. Pec-k " •* 

« c-eoiie^, “■ 

“ O-rt. HilUrl " “ 

'• C. HaTlU-f, “ " 

** «i G». StLv«i\,} r • ‘ ** 

** J . V\. 6- •.cAjTWrMLm _ . 

* e R \v. L<on_. (7$ N.Y-V. 

<• T. P. FYL-i«. " •• 

*' U.P RcbervS, *• *" 

• • J. De L (mwfiT. g f. IN. N. V. 


C e. Pat»» 

Nerscsy 
C k a 

D. GiLUtf*, 
£S C. Dr«r.r\*fL 
* J.w. Hu-jW 
‘ C. Ay«tj, 

C. KlrUy 


A P.S. 

..r •> 

IS. MAINE V. 
HS N.Y.V. 
SLA. K-. CAV. 

xe. c.v. 


A»U 


1 L j . 


’Cliffc. 


“So.ck« 


ADVERTISMEI’IS. 

the first annual 


OaPT.S.E.TL crm,«.8orv, 17<> N.Y.V. 

^ Greo. S>. Crofi/U, 13*>.d. V. 

Lt, £. Ktrt^, »tO ,k M.Y.V. 

^ D.6r. Well.'-rvgt^, V|f N.Y.V* 

“ L ,W. St«W«TVJOTL. “ “ 

“ j. 8cacod< <r “ 

“ J. East, 1 st Ark.V. 

a.C.McDowell, 2.0 bU.Val. 

“ j M.Ro Urt St , Xj cr “ “ 

CAPr.T.LV^ j PRISONERS or CAMP-FORD, 

* $ F rederick, « “ * 

‘ r L.FisUr “ - ‘ 

Lt. Gr. -Jo Unvote re, ( * 

“ N.Powel, " “ “■ 

\J. Ete.nn<£ ft, . f* 

*<■ tt. Walton., 34-fk 
^ J.K.berr,, »75- N.Y V, 


OF THE. 


IN MEMORY OF TH-E 



OUNO; 


Shine!! 



116 N.YV. 

J.M.So.mpSc^ TfTMASS.V. M. 

H.lAfWrse H . 

Ht.nvWti'Civ. *’'*■ MtiF.MAe 

W « *'■ 

R.W. NWs “ E-Yjmwt 

T, D. VT«A*,vWi-»k, 1 0^- CVvalnry 
is»r.i-v* k.M.fci! ' DlANA 

UiLvvP<t C . Lwww, *'L t N ' 

“ yVfr.BuihUx " ' 1 , 

V« J.W. Out,*, 

“ vv. H. C»wJ.it'., H£• A Mms.Y. 
h S. F. Wkife, “ 4 ‘, 

* Q.F.EJJLj- “ " 

B.P.Stb«*lV-, “ 

{ * T. D. NeWCOCYIV 6 ‘ 

U H<tn.T3 HaYnlw-l’* H " rv ’ a,s 
•< H. 0. PO.TWK, SI i-rA c«T f s 
“ j.W.ls«n, A s ' 

Tk„.5.Cwr«S, H» 

“ p. vwuk, “ 

'» Rok’t Dw-rin., 4 
«« W. H.Ro.Tp 7 s ” ' 

o BE YV-rtekt. 18 IOWA. 

<• E.j.WlU « 

“ C. H. S’K<*T rrv.u.N\ 7 1 ^ xr .\fjY' 

(- J. M.W«oA.8. IS IOWA, 

“ F.' SUfg, EriNP Y v 

4f W«tks, £{ u-tva^ 4 -^ u 01 r - 
AcV^MAst J 

-r^ tr J.W.W».sklu.TrM 

CC 4 1 W.W. FowUx 1 ' 

Lt.C^.Jv F Cr.c,k^r L 

A.U.Ewf^ W.VV.WelcL . 

E^jiuneer RA.Fon, , 

Am«OoWT40.iv 

E>u S i«>v A.H.Ras^LU *. 

R.Kiiar, Cu^E Sck»«nA«r ManUs- 
LT 5,KAvf IOWA, 

Lt.T.A, Ku’bt iy IOWA. 


ANTHONY’S 

TiA-W xTT W 

Solo *.t STEYEt-SS" 5 
ORL/a S3TORK-_ 

J^^To THOSE WHO Smoke! 

M, 


'«&9 tjro 

rv\AN UFACJVRER, 

W K© legale i. R etcu .1 n 


SE EAMS, 

No.l .Park Row,Cof\. FkohtSt, 

TVifrws , R«.a.Scrr\a.Ut* 


WILL bE HELP on 

w m&*. 

FE B., 22 9 186 4- . 

FLOOR MANAGERS. 

LT.C.t.J, B. LEAKE, 

MAJ. R.C. ANTHONY, 

Lt. JOHNSON 

CAP! COE. 

music YANKEE BAND. 




C. HATLEY, 

YK 0 ?tSS\«HN\_ Ylfs\SVCwVeE.H. 
CORNER 

S'tlv AveNOf &■ Soap-St, 


TWY. UWQ? Tttt^KT’ 

ET3HE SaUcrikeY luxvino Suf. 

^ cdLIUe i 

tke <LUm.tt.tfc, kous a t ieust lut Uj»*TL. a S)9£- 

C Lft* KenreulY • An.^- onfc w’lski'v G. Ttc«i»H 

taYV "\ta 

Sfttnfc e-naUsiv'g 

FowA ConFEPERATE VosTAGE. mTFVAPS- 

We Ott.ocra.Yv.tets <A-j»eTiect tt7vtv<lote ftrr 

CH-ILUS, 

Piles, 

PULMONARY OR SEDENTERY COMPLWHTS. 
C.C.N., U.S.kRM'S. 

J toS? «_ AcLyI ce gratis and,n« ^u.ta- 

tvtnvj as kd. H ouys for ConSuLltcutlarv, 

6 A.M., to 9 P.M. 

Orr tCE!, fronting Ike LiveRY $TADUE, 
2 . Slocks frOTrv Ly ON &-H AbEY s SoFf 
Factory &. iBH-PIM AlLEY, 

iiwtfd. 


Dr. DAVID HERSHEY, 

m^VCALU V SMPvGiEOH, 
Office No.4- Water Street*. 


Dr. H. ko.vi'y\g T«e-ntlj fetuTwci 

from gfu lx tern i ve tcu-r *V Eu-Yopa 

yylur*. k«- kiU koLoi. ftn fef.\r*tt.‘t<i\«vd of 

t.k*s 

ljv a.-nuou.i%ti'i\j fka-t Ka Is fw 

r. atf^dall e<ULg; N-B. SW^ 

^^OutwivTCycL, • 


SOAP! SOAP!)SOAP!!'. 

Hao, mg opened (A.TV. e»itens'tYe. 


s 


_ cap Manufactory! 

at Pont Borougk, I myite t'ri'j f rt-Snis a.rd. 
Hve Pullic.gfcner<Tl\f fe a. 

FAIR TRIAL 

of tko A rti ole . r T 

,tt Jri, Tlay-uey. 





















































VoTL H 



CAMP f o;<D, TYLER, TEXAS MARCH 'i st.1864 


r^l S. 


b#i* • 

''c. OI'C A lUr C S'. 

IcL 


A f V 'V'thv 


1£» 5 00 

3 DO 


Par A-n. 

i 'V • Cy o |o( e-i ^ 

S'Tvjle •<■ dcv.*<»>#d t-y Comer _ ._,2^ 

• ADVERTISING 

Otv« Square, inqr/tiOK , - ..._ 1 00 

'•(uarM 4/ c ‘ .. ..... X SO 


Two 


Ql'C O ©Lvlli 


.400 


&•—’ All 0 6V\mu.nju , ck,tl^ u 9 calender for V u-nueat o iv 

^u.vft be aoc#>-v|*o.ivw«X tj tie real Xix*i\vC o.wd oX^.x<* • V 

A-,« uryiftr^ as ok. g«var*n£«c o> g«*d rc-vtn. «*. fta 

f 'a.Vt of t\\e OxJVcv TVe Cll’.\U>L cLAui.*yta4\C to T«t^rrv 

.jOC&C M.S. /\cli.Te*« ‘F. A Q? Foho 6 j>A*o*-'C.m 

TruA, TcnAS. 

^5 r JT.7 r 7\i.L Kinds okPuahm .\rvt>f Ar4ct JOB¬ 
PRINTING, Neatly ExecuT&u AT THlSs 
Office d\ the Publish^, w h ^ 


'Ifter a v*fe effect k©X teen. toU*n 

rv\y\*i\p v**-* dieLir^d b> tie GW<xvY* 

___ 1V« -ryot belonging Cl tie Com nttVe a^J- 

!>«»•'*><C c»-rvrk.c^ \cft1i%e ialLpr»ftftt exception. of Q*w tMay, 
wi> remained/ ns Rep*/rt*» for IV© Fj-AQ * x 


Cou.Bc^HtL, wk* l * t \a *#«x Sr»vf fcry CLS Jocu Ql% Ofpn 


nfti 


A\ It invCtJklU i*J he , l ‘ fc *« S*!j 

,>£OKGE WASH tMOk TOM; ti, r»«uv ‘T? 1 "* 4 w ^" f X • 
Jl.rkn.« C >«.• t'“ h «-“•** fi .; m ^4 tr r * £ TV ‘' 

CjdV ,vv V* Vnend «wtf »V.« 3 At -F TVc D v»nv,re*' iraljCo^ 

riel© ***«•*. *V» rotlrat.K m*>«/ pewey-fld <X 2 ^- **»•» 


«v#f C«Fo r 4 . 

i*©k«#d ndV.- 




It ^**UU'*w y^f^rta 
• (V t r\rer«it «r A«L»v*r^ fn^ Tk« faerof il» 
ft 


U tU OU5» # H#n, >nai« kls a rf .«ara»^e, yave fiu.w,, «#i«^«ve. , , . . . ( l «u 

UCkr».o*v(<*.X|ol tU* kouor C4kt«rpML i4i*K kvrr\ , >U«w^kH A\ ike. <4 «tvcA<a. * • •»' **•'* .q 

ovv* rP ftw'cV ^vurl lk^)v k* rr 4 ' 5 «tf % vykose Surv<U tf Lift v-ipL 1 viANNE oro\» “rv d-* U‘ v«vtV» 4 ?oU»'^ f, '^T a6 ^*J vV k' t k 

v. a) ykYy-ijt 'v d. in H<« ■moftl" a^r«,U*£ 


n«r. iiurL >u,iv kasc ket*K ciu>ie>v 

umonj So lituiM of icdoLoJuL lif^ra^v ivttuli 


At 


THE 

*CT tk« 


FI RS-r ‘MOV£. 
^ 1 


\J cy IK* «T •v*J p . i>^ Or>a»j*frrA 

vAfve^ .villi w ?*y-'^«sX.*. itv Hi# !^t tuuri r e r f *-AC Ter 

ik- Lrfk. .Lln up. Ike ‘~uU .t «F <?•-.* CcawIvv. fa'K-.L 

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^ ^to*clock frill, rtv .U ; *'c»'ht •.-> v 

Of I CaUs l»cpa^v ti ar^irt, aiW ci‘ tiiul'u <j-j uxr/j .jihT .‘ . \u •-. f|. „ 


.. % _ _ __ fro>»-s 

^ iiv4*iv^ g&Mt, ,<iv o^ ic^aXwUioL c^tuln 

nr«»»r. t *. 0 P wlutk U« toofcieistjL Mtu-; 7WJ~ Ue. r»as»w fu^»y 

of IV* obitch keckinJ WJ J•'€ lirfk day *r Ike fulUxfr of 

pur Ota .yyl^y _.i nX fcfU'r ^ W*Al »n 

Homes U.waj^ o.C«€^»fciX 1t\e VOi'tlflH 

C'%er. w« i-» tk«\v voCcX Secret*«f tV« Cer«M , rwrtT< 

C* 0 T. BAILIIY itbkiklucttl **■ R*Jeluli«r\ . u.»-y,y#i rX» ^ » Svd 
'ComntC/Ue Cor\»i\(fn^ THHCtj on Poi.Ml and. Osiat f0 h 
*. K.-. ^ J\ lv a4 ’a» ri •tij atvX lUe CU*ur C<G^PT.BAlLfi 
t r. S. E Th >MAMN «.T\X C/.pY. CAphu^v IE5 

TXr>v |jrts«Kt«X i. Tfe.>t(oXi^. 'Va.J- a.vo^ey Crm.»vcttee 
o^jtaixtll t* a.Tt<nX ti TV* |»roCarcu^ of local. a>vXT>vairu.yM 

exhl M*/iiC _ CarVt 5 UnX CoTTAlfO C 06 0 Waih^rn 

|U.rvoL Piez>cra^ vs*re *-^|*oiAdftcL. 1‘ollor.irw >a.L*cL C^fT 
T IfjMAjow I inTr colufedl a ^estLiilorv Ujifow^ft. 

« ef Fue r 0 »»ri Vy . r l* X V V. C* 

To*k# i'l JX .v ykanv, ami. Lr.WniCr*T Wfft . 

a*t. Vt T iujr^sc'CClA- sx. •jliJC’*v* ft ^Vv cnW •"' 

VtaT a. CrmnXltre of Fl** mUh >iaJCj 

IH^ll V.- i« -'Cr TV*: ^'oanX for 5 v e * a'.X 'mai^O- 

Sujfck otker f-rxAdl ay*a>iaoy»w*vv« ' ecesarN ' arvcL C* 
frruv 1W» Pso«*amwi A olaX Ca.pT/J 0 » m 3»n * 

S -Tj NobUtt- X*u. ‘-T Co* ‘V«re >v-«;.aii 

M 0 vcl Uj C^rr CiAiuct TUaf ft* TWie^af tW« C-«ne>al 

Co«r^Jt*« act- 0.1 ^>*.*1 f-L<;#*r«v 

_^oo.rrieX. CapT 0ik.«‘>*CiifAivi Wai' ft% LUaW 


li\meyX^V ^ ft*w«V wt U^X-tVc. rjcmin tVvi >vu.”n\b*> op ocov- 


CIV k-v* 

ya'oer ^vn «*« ^>eie»^ U o^r renders, as tke 
tXa f'em tVe rvA.rrvC.ep 'fl 


yr al>« c. 


Anv 7*«rvark% 

?c 


ocm .tjetf 

C.ieKi~ Jn. 



|ar, 

..»5 «£ W.J*M,$ Hi* - 
’%tr b rjifl, 


gvO\. 

Ka»l. ry du ful.-uitvo Jwrv 

iKK.abiti,^'' «f n* buoyrovc^k rcm v -,f»ty e 

itv tVO.^ ^nowuei H4 xT uwj ' « t .< V^MPAw^TKort/kwc, 

CorKev i-attcy j-P'ujjpe Oa\X‘^KC.\ bew< A w ^ 

. r ^ mwetvv.^ wn called, f* order C^r 1 S,E I ,. , x 

M/aoA R C AnntoHY t»!cc*tfX U h c C kXc/ ; w I >l v L* 

wc-.«e|»i^. wiiUitw ajcprojoKutc tHvarhv Vvj^, x i; vc ->b • 
jeeb oF 1W*■.na^ti.'rig ^c,-»c X T L ^?/c.s r (Jv? 

^Aoyeiv.y, ;tk. , llu.rk/,tdU.»lv froim fie Cca r.v.iV; not 
*rfri&£K' hr 1 1- S -OrtUtrj U Fcicc a*v. „ IV. ikinuV . 

»» vyA»i ^u>(u(ikl»i. <\ L v Pn»ri o v •«_ »l- ^ > ^~ 

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litck w<iS jCe \ brc-i^kk .it L T. 
r ».Ct ^ixLu.l" u i»C^t a:i 

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WA-i ^ Lt. CoiCTIV 

lwf * - OV-, v < t/>osv x. t> M 

V i | . 

.-JUX ,1*Ou.ri Ay ildAOrle 
£-. KfKBS ^ lU T*.*i :iW4cCi»Vj 

C,-\Pr THO>-i rSo 4 


J. H DwoAn^c wocvtX arcs<.v> , v "-case tf a- Celeb/ tz*n on 

tie 2X° -’p K.[ Fokm . Orcnei'lrt 4.C III rraiPc .:f X b 

vvcls ccciVyrii.Oyj^ofcKicX bj Tk^. JdaC'r for tit par- 

|3as« or aiL r»occ$&ary uyx.v c^r\t»Xi x*. 

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0a»>t B’^ TmaT Tk# S %-C r eCo rij rCaX fkc »ve.i»-es or T\\e Up . , 

Co^ .-vnvtttVxt v» kick will iXm* . Ik O^FCC.>)\cn.i~ L 7 K h C 

vvitVx u vn^tiO A CaPT. VVaSHFwHN^ tie SuijecP *f Retire sk lo a - iAr awm $‘£k. Ah d. rfoWcl^S? j^r*^ »o w^cl 

'rvTuii was le^r te TVs care cf tVe CtTVNYmfto-r ow ToosIS . : iKe sle^j ftaP aomes rurb to ke>* Kniv^ 

^ Kexel u ^y-K tv.ir; t la.« ed bj Cxr T. Bailey , Hv». t a. cor»v wIvoreTjxe drdlXycrtj r AjflL'n^ War’s accialyn., 

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BwT, woivcL:r 4 *v^^ joOwse., t> ttoit witU. clv^c».t?v fears 


HO b/ ds ir^e s*o^! ioT ti\ Cir* IW^ ioal JUlaie*' 
Wf A. Cixpt*'.« > wkilfiritv^ lo its Ca^itive yn-at^ll 

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AVke*» orekxn 3 a cmi.-U.alaJ n^t* i**v releL faryols 
Oy L* v^x^efidj ftre*.l' wit*, cruel a 
(jin Cotvxlrij’e u. waL 0 U.T FVeedLoti-v^s life *{ 

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^ keayVs deej* sorrowj *oPTl^ sitrtX 
)\* w \ct MVS OkC** miMivi aj' .‘rUtT OKt duir Won! 


racXowj loiiy k oa)'i »K a*' iTai *\^- -o. 


<!• r by 


mi;,#,, oi 

0'iyv 4 # < d | u>>< 1 fi/iAj HQ Ar«TrO>*V / N'Vj J* G»n A^a »\d 0*(”t 
r VV. \/j 0 t.r j t +.?re aj>m ©<• J*A fi*ye«, V| ^ wk#p|\ 1(\« CU 




■JlkU'i wa.5 i/t*yiVi»v li' 

Af'Vr A 

U- K 1 ? S •jImX^Vi. T 
ai" T c 'cl*ek ; 

y VOgr*ll 


XeteoL 


Tk t eyes ftah watbi. tU 
jiort i”Ci:*cu.%S< en. u«on vartct.^ >>vn*-r toptS J-»Xa< 1, lt«*m ll«ng > usk } ‘oP lips fta.* 
"*+'"41 **- adj 0 n,tn^krs.h uxdiC FkiUAY tvt c ^VTiy ynoiXy?y sveepj wk>, Polity 
m m.a tb* off Sul- <Tfti->vTy\iTecs T^tr to rAprrt J 

l- U-ri d "tK< W\«A tire cl^dtA-^eX .4.d.e ,l -rti^X I I i i i 

^ 6 LUvor W&- SvveeT 

~ il c w Hvoivy wv ti p Tie 

>H\ iV* u*L*uy>vr»s<nt" «f ti* Vn««tiiv^ of ti« VVk.C7t ^VfaM.,vi e-Jtolls <*n. Sl^ivy 

M aO. , Tke Co*" ugAl^N 1X0^ t wt“ Jlly;. l * J *, » * f*. . 


d-S.BtJRKtL 

Maj J CPka’v, 

CaPT S .Ct. 0AIM 

*' W.P. OoG, 

A. a)&HNSOM a 

* C S. tz. . 1 NOMAVSiWj. 

'* U-W. VVASHec RN 


C APT. T* L. SpRCTT, 

D.T or,«Ev 

vJ L'ilINCiKMMj 
A MkPKOCTO^ 
P.W. NoolETT, 
Liz^ :.B F. Wric.ht. 
^ Cox, 


/f 

c/ 

c# 


I ,\ aOc«rduy.e.< w 

IT « ^ Uni ,wlil n a wt , m liojw^vue* ja,\ yxor; bv*r a<i#i 5 - »i% 

vvgaiV a-Ttht IV* feHoUrlV* rtifTrvmg jf»rTV< 7 urptSf ep CA>rv»J[( ,,j On 

H»c 'tvun. t»>ne wi’lk fVe Co*-' Cewn m ilt^ k r 0 rv PV< 

VeliC a. i>..p S^S&iorv^oito- 

ivwl/r^aVl'Uj jf »uece3»ki^ls'Cafyy^',v «ahtV« Pro^ 

Rr<r \nbeur.g \»eeaiyN<. *o.'i«tvp- cxn. «/jux*.yftrreivl' y*.lowed Soow 
idfe-r it* j rg^iialiVy-. j to C.«>ne t*‘*lktr o»^ 


cm. Xi m witi. ^uiLLerv U(X.VJ, 
\ruisf be dumb, 
wOl ( \oF came? 


Lt. C C Me D®yv*cu 
•Hftevlt.t a|»[>oA*vtr*^ f e.' lij* C’umirvXilea ; C*.pt.J Pin Ni>- 
TlAr*( vtcsiycXti hnowv kov*/ iivit. C n.irvutt 2 « a ere b le Saxtcanv » 

mX ]' i yuiy-Cvalty J ajapu. vn • e iv If wa» jLctdeJL TUaP a Wp*wgi> 

C oyr.nvtltW jJujuXX C<dt y Wflu tie Hiilte i vva^ 1 of SU^i t/r"Cf*» 
t’oivf#r tx Pixvul SufflCvervf* G CCC 0 hioLvlv 0 .il *ti a .F OoulcL 
b*: Oi»yc toward* making ikU Cfc|«U*£or v tC JL^ O »VC- 
venwrTtXertvC w»*iT iicaCwre 1 *tv ,^rs c*fPer 

f f -^i’L tY L» B.;r n- u.yxV Disli on ^La 


In0»nC. K6vs yiaixyo. warm KaovP l»<aJ4 — 
U. eoL one’s TxUiiv^ «UlU, 

orv sW\ivy etetuVS IrtviVj 

A> dil/AWPirtiW liftiK H «ov5rv Her TnoiOviaX n Uyrrvrv ; 

v- «... K.1A . I...F sv».-«v,*tu.M«»e«<*8fw siii,!tUnw-U*. U«e, 

tiN Chdar^diliin ^ Sueccjjfulk, Ce^ry;v JV« Progrc.yi'i».e of if* (And fair RhoOiT ls*a*t,D slunxleyv cvHvfer Ar\e«; 

• <XTV itaU^Yftmev.r f*,l*>wed So©'^ pr. ». 1-4 . . . . , 

wM.«r i.p . i«Mw.»*mr. ; w '.«'■« t*:elk«r >v Sam»*du^evc -v | V* ntra dwells l/oc<N4Cncv< r yytiJUr &4‘n€r*al d 
off 0 'cUtk At ^»ve^ k^ar lie Com. »yu/T*r «»w*U% vn*l, ftk* in tie i \ 1 t IVt* _ , ek „,. 1 . I «> 4 , _.jL 

^id-Utnnartee #nn Rr»|o«^d«• inv^oSuie i 5 p/**o- .viii ^TcX ^ker« -IV|.AW*iATr^N SJiPiad^Rer siuw, satly, 

(*v-or yi^tvoy, ik% ive^Msixr^ 1 Io «‘cU \ A.kl lAmd. r»Us ier urow clvo,ytop- l eet S a,i\d 8kaf\CS 

oa ArfayveUv vaoymn^ tU CpttvWttt ni^h f ty *• Qolie-w- darners « 9 «r fta Ncviertv lake#. 

a. ykohart ro>naVis iverv k -Ad-i.«d »w.a-nd. oJUVwryied j o a 0 

*YiNOi - pus?. ^ | ^ 

! ile>S OorUmfeS —'fro» Tl E 0t ^ TLro^i IjoO’edlwiWegp 

^ fke LalloweJ siinw-* of ail tie UtarL Uvc* Le%pj 

14iluiJll Ml T. . Trcmv bla-o I.'hio tc Covohaoo’s Vjvay^e, t 

j Awol o^er Lowa’s pr acre eft, grt£iv Urge , 

At 0 -toad~ eUvftiv coto ok A.M• of tte 2r2.d c?p j ^rvdy w ker*t Itie vv i*nct.iYw TuLUH 0 : $ odfflovvSj 
Pelra-e/rv^, fto l> uiLis^s and Street* **b»w.t* Pi^Tn A«*nwr andi Qy INDIANA vvtli. silvOTJ KiTyest ^LvyS^ 

^j Stv trr; Ul ‘ >— irC tfe J*Rf bV “^ U ' ( r^AxuL fx!r Awmsas skirt* tk* Tuoian %Ty^<L, 

L ' L ' ' -VwX* ^ tit for-.n of a;v ,w,-n«i. Poe m mc vvX mctrv - U ^ al w e vVA ' n5 5,l, . v-L r 



auon a "\y 


>v ' 4 ’ wC y»tu.vw«d vigui'iv/lt R\e pftuccru. lj Itv 

vV'dJvS of U'.*-e’ -Dl VlNCti AM tityv nvved an adiewylv- & 

TuCnTj iOT .ft.* ync^Lng of lie CeminAlIfij nvmid a^Jctv »pu.> a p 


ft 

^ jprew. ii. C#b.. A J ,H-Puc.**mk 

lie renverk, .'nod* k^ Ly, 


i Tk e.r^ S Uep ouly Konveftj wUtre T^nd^y kearli^ like dovdA^ 


^o tn>Hi‘.r-’caX<d ft 




cvkiklledj lilyooX det tie wenew of jltClT uXv??^ Idvoa . 

ft© CyvArtt afi»©yyd>tv cv flow ef ! . -_ , . . . 


-#v .u r.AM , w ao 


otriatt* r>v ? UtvC was <r^L*^oMy <C JJ^vrrfii af»j* eat. fo jAwak^riv.Bar).•' Tjx 


ixyOarp' Iky Scnj L He*v«)v uspiVai — 





























































it 


THE OLD P l A G . 


m«*x*nr.i cl'mi soumi,’ wir«a • 

Iftrp ! nn<l IttrCU vyift LfLr 5**^, 

A F»fc«r l«nd» frvrrv- If Cavern Mut «lfty , 

T r #TTV tiee.V«\v’l ki|L (vvlllj ♦^•-fye TVeedrltv’S Uvs.*<L WttCf 

C U^*T £ G*©, ^''fnirv Hu eX»*l-v*,t i 

Wk«re Fv« 1 fJ* trv , f rnertyr* ., tfrinfed wife CV«msow JoarS, 
£Uftm thresh tfve aaare fiaiii ®f »^U«, stcr* ' 
r»Mi. Hlav « n fee Hi_ ro Cotrx^s — Jut awvA*,( 

•l reuhte J. Calm , aW JOTfo*.'.^ l*.|- se>ewe 

Wfflv jUvkc kuS a^v/Lt shu.de I in<*.»*■ h-, 

BmA through »rv* ttar)i\, <WmX lkn*«^fe* >n«Xv^JurdLu.»*k. 

^ er it<- lvr.v<^. >lm»L* 1 <<ivl* L»j S vv 9yd(J. ka-ivt(- — 

B<» vutking foJt-fjl S^urmi Bae, Ae/s ltr+***L j 
B#* LdmtF gUaims o'er Allegh^;*^ snowj 
l:ftUiL:^l o’er ^•UlAtU^te gl#*-* 
n*» tye**t Xte«j le-rvWt. CvLtttJ. w'ni^s.— 

Tkert—arvol there —mv U.«eX,u* country clin£$; 

** - i-He* * her RrV W T.n- ^ * 

Hey hcra-chili- her goJLL'kc W'.fcHiKOTOW 1 . 

i«nX of &eN ortk ' rvLtr* l»u Ji N.foU 
%^o* e*s k tfctv^xv a. f)*ee-!>orh, -NVtiau's souR J 

where wild. Af>uD\[ic vva-vc-x 
^ fetdoTn.’* fo-itk th* Souls nf slaves! 

• Tern, cell thy plaiKt^on ail thj IreCzfe.s lor me, 
H • vy SwJlt fl»€. $ xulhmg sam^J ih*4 8 aCreX n\gr n^ 
^^h*m man. hood's showt am R clulclho^X'ft hvp vvg 
Bkv d«*r -CvftoL VicmVfc ftf ^ASMlNUTON >«pta 
Xky Iramuvu!^ H uscLfor'’* 4 unlit vyevt ttvtv hm eel, 
wu, "^»*sHinct»n turned. the 1 i\vuvlerY ittd j 
On TNentm’ I plain ar\gL^It?\-Yi\o«...fks ftetl f)j«y (***$ 
"W\«T.e\VA»HiNaTW< r«/ri«ve^ hke <k« ntf^X dLa.^, 
Ami rtUfei Itjrr.tvs tkrou^kSci».u>jlKitls ^‘tivy^ergv; 
AVker^ •rve* aroxt K’vS ^ra.'j-ey -*/ro» ».Vfillty Por^e * 


"Tl^r yiicir Se<i wiliv ^•cLU^c stVe^Ln^^k tin 
mo 5 € ? <xcy eA g?ovC-% v 1 Tt«e kcro^s 

wori<iev(ng l^rcms paf^ietf 

V.rJinia ■ xa.-k i«rTvo<>.ft» yvlvo»e 

Sc elites Lie crtctk«<i- crownless t^rarct* kne«l~ 

Tvchv ttie«. , frenv- ttv«-ne 0 k< Jly«Lrvi( ki* \*m*uUc 

bor auv-tluS Uvo-J.^frc« la^vj. Le ga.^e 1 

TVoin tV^ b(.w.c kil^ft ki^ S»>a.ri 7 >^ &eyv{« Ue Cox^kf"- 
Tke-j lk(xre Ivti fa.y^«.,buL( aN 7V>e wt vl<L Wy IkougLtf 
t Tkw tte port'aii wk*^e< Lis St ~'l ocxti-e4a%~ 

a({ tt\^ cavtk sx, T^t yimI* for Ivis de&d.^^ 

» tvjf A«yo-cki«f3 rkt jOr(>/k«*JL of ki J $kr^ne - 

TkoJ aU ina«.,iiyw haigkt Uar?i kis f«;ttv J.-viyer" 

I ke Ja»fk tk^h ikatttys Hv-o'me* and. guuJUrA elfins 
A-*J. fiooXy <Ve«XoK\» td.0* lor>oUv.A-n* veins, 
-A-ViX jkvt^ceo Troi»\ fr^Ctncn’s SouX<}k* tu.nej f . 

0 itjroujkL V.Vg-ma / left.' 05^ VVO-* /kv 1'ru.tt — 


*. _ |M,y 1 ru.*i 

TTis gfawA €^aiivwle^ <xni kty jocacefti oLwat*! 
T Pkou. vv tyt »a> ^kccou~" tl\ou. ocp- U 4 ,-A;« ^>ow»JL 


MARRIAGE AND ELOPEMENT IN 
HI&H -LIFE !! 

In H.; s Lovyoucokj OH Tlv4 tvemnd of rUf^^Tk 
of Fetr u,aLrj 9 ^ j, y C-arvclU- Li^ki'J* tyCkiftf JUJ 
|ie« fYtoHToN^ o-t H\.< 0(f\t° of Wit El^t^n ent M k 

H. 0 . Danc ^ u.uX M i $ s 5 . E,T H Uttv 

of rtvt* h»iaee "WFey*. Ia,it keavA "fro'nx , IU«,\j 
AR®>-e ito^ing aF tk< Fifth Avc^uf Hov*c, 
iXerll^ »->c W.Is» U floVivyce of tke Ityjast H\t 

parti tA.J,a_y y of ft^oiY JU % g r ac e*fui. elojocmerv^ 
W(X8 w*U kucwn ucniev«t*®3 alt iv* 

tke VIou-a e. 


TO TRAVELLERS!! 


Ani tt uju„ lyr^fJe *i*l »j(. V an 

Hvpyvnei- U>vfc &odt wL(e Sat^>v wa* 

vo ie&fuJ. 53 vn.jokotvies of" wovfng waolv 
3 ole rrc-a Cu-ln\S of Siley-t so/,*tuJ.«c.* 

Ahi low, Jott melo-jLIes vf ir<e 2 .e0 tl«.nxL ; 

_A.rut y*oIti'wg L.a.y monies ©f r«vers ! 

Tkou. ‘nurit of cm^ire^ tA./" wjvooe foskring LcotrC 

All nationo cLrink 3 antL all La> e 

InB«w.A ok Kajlv vc^Ia " g'i kj ^jQTrtyy wi<ie “* 

T*k^ weal^L. occr wcrvJ^v. ult.^ Tkv |»*wer ou.")* pnU<. 

M*jctTo w r e 3 t! 1 I 3 Ynilkotvi fim*l rtl.» Koar ; 

To vralse fte Etemoit. foT*tk«xr T> ee<i-orv\ ? .5 Xtwer 
3kft siiorei !ktir Utntk«>*% fcovs 

A.'npl. wkere ^iio»*vAi !a|i>fckoO' m#*xH ta^rv S>\C»w5 • 
-Awkore tt« OKiO^"nur#eJl CTNitui^ rolls 
Ije«j.p.- to Hunt arm.% froryvJFeTv-v\s^{va.n.iA>c ItllU. 

1 liere »UE Th*^ Kneet^ O ?tu gliiesFvVc^gni tell, 

VVkere VA^Ltr^t m. Jl o*vnr«? an 
m tn. Tke ker 0 J ayfxxL t wottv >n«3u-!eX UanX, 

J. kfc rn^stie tkat* seol^X our nv«.T«rvL-,U! 

Xj un«t <?f lk« Soutk / v\ ko$e glorlou4 t’fe if'otts 
J3aim. "fro>n, vales arui. oXor*Frov%\ % Ul*! 

J-k'y trow oil 5unstvir\e *lWy Ee« *■ h a.1 L 'fit £~- 

Ttj brC(i.tt\ va Vi ntw*^>6 a~rv vfciee a. I^tCj 

X«anX wLxr© fi«: «ul> w J IK a -1 lAer*i'^Tra^r-jove© Jwcohj 

a/t tkj* tv o <? Xtan is ft,riD w ‘.IK TO.tv.eA 

Xj a>\X w kcre^Tke 0/1X wifK noctor’X ki eses v>005j j 

Ar.i wKeyoFv weeu 3 qtr Iroiio-E Xtws ! 

O Q^e-rnL^ Soo^tklan-i. ! (?r<JWTiei itv\il tt oa - 

1 Ly Silkew TKva-F rrvivrk ttve jwoet* koiocs 

X(('e?S w/ioto 9 f(vc/y ivwmt Vvo Tr \J®c*t VixotvS, 
-Hojm Ue Su.rt 4 - (Veu/. \ !oUt.s like Ike yKiYt! 

T Ly fk.#ne 5u.frvV>.rfr anX tli^- re^Lrt H\C * 6 oJ , 
•Vkoie ckayrr^i S ^>?3 ovv>i Iky s oft Central 7 - 
AK leawXeo a? ^oir'.I'K l tky Wf.irt' vr vU i.ff slv<xr& ami 
Ou> FottKer’y <<f^volyei oa'.ul ovv>* HrXO J « rt.rt,<»' 

Tlvy Ynyrtl* Uo o-mf ! tij r^XCimr ovowo F 0 twme*~ 

1 L‘ s name — i 3 kerlfci^e — kf 1 If*ft |^/ae« tt* m 1 
We ji t(,{. tkee tk ut — 37 ! £j'* of fre jun 


Wko^kwaii^ ^<e) r » wer» a.w e^L wi fkVoiee ^•rokwKjJ 

Tkee clu-sf^ri r«urut,u»t«*vM-ejt tKe sLeii.ivg St»tn 1 

A>*3 vjoa.i\j* Til e^u^Lcs kc^»f fky 5un#ef gjlty! 

Xrosrv ho>l«o‘n m ocarvtaiHS a.T^.i f Torn t ou-tkevn leas 
Ironx OYtevf k<ai(a nXo ar«X from. vvCIfctri*vg SCao 
acls ^laijoive bv<ea< hewFyei^kfs of UtH.tvgs v\ orv., 

Bor 01X of VV*t#r*k' 1 

A>*X o ? « v IKy Fills it kvoocly—* tKaf ft>T>n 'X n ^ 4 ^""i 

Bcurrin^ tk t sti» r Tn ami Ikewn^ Ikrou^k tko rugLX 

XL.ft.f aw/cat .Trosenctj Tnovimp frvnv o-keve., 

CtrJef ©rv its troiv, 4ut •n. if* gi4ine<4 — tov-e. ! 
Pyonv Ueaven X <-^ ? oWerKom‘t r/oom jLefteri 
.Anet \vkoc. 'rnou.m fu.[ 6oa tvTry k-^eelc, it” l*>*i 

At 4. «V. )huTV»\u.Vft i L elt^y 4 ker k ttxX-— 

r tV\a.Taiis lkee y >*lJtev? Are tky ckilclyvn. dteai.!^ 


er> and ttto twilit #«n*y*a^y X* rtv*. facT of ovar 
ka*j*| OUn ^Tg/of iu ^odovewell K^wix 


’t^E nm nvEiwf w\^i. 

We cbfcsirtt fo call tke attention- of Travel- 


a>vul Cfmm^toas estulti 0 Umemf', vmi fo ^ a -Y 
tUai" we ar-e »vx> w ^»re|aa.reflL to accwrnwo- 

ixl( wki* w.’fl gi v e cco tic tall. 

Itv C <nx.m oct. on. w 1 IL tke Hototjvve kave 
a.-A've t«» very dFovkIc^, un ier tKc atva-Tge of 
Johnson . 

Tk* finest CRr’CKtF—V u-seiat 
Tkis tatakli^k'mevi.J'. _ n /-* 

DJLIN&HAM, NOTT & Co, 

PRtf RftTOHS. 


UNDAUNTED HALL. 


tvoaVs Ka» v'oittj v*noL wukeo from. tYanefj 

Hoy <kllrvg* LTe-t'ies Jwayei tencatk Vl* g(urvC€ •* 
Tkat muJed. kreas., Ikof Sou.r«r»^ k«ln\ fke 
AvvX tiw strong ka-ncl H*vat lifts kfe'r tr«tt^kev knees,* 
now gjoeaks # wKUt all my filter 1 tv^ ive^tK, 

AA’aiti idr t\t,v Voioe.tul kwi'yt no wori jl.e sa lK \ 

J'or' WwcTlerrni w» y.Xs •wotl anX "Xv.wl-rs Toll.-» 

AnX fk< w ?kl Te>nje etf* f > rgkto nin^t 3 t>^l ? 


THE FINEST CONCERT HALT INTHECITY1 

B/ot 5 aVp>avsci ky for 0 orve erts, u.1- 

lit JVleotmgs, ^*-° 

of .Bolt**'{~7 J ( a ££ dni S kina-bone 

My. 

U&~Tor ‘fu.rlti^r p<Xrt<Gular$, znowr-e 

of STEVENSON,COE & Co. 

TiT.B."A FreE.MnO-EaW^ U.nier ckarge of 

WM. JOHNSON, S«m.i -weeJdy. 



ix)fCt>o*— 


T °niy k« «.Yj ol-to urnaC -Atount r n» rv** ton lI> , 

rke roar of Cunn«H and. tt\^ -*ra.V>- of icml, 

Ianly keo^n? uaoTv.'Vlrgitivo.'i <*' f 

Tke irum.** wi'U rattiit^^anaUke tran*vjott\ Uare, 

WkjU •Uwit^ *UO*.B,« "j*HNSON’»Mv<-r EVpi 6 lCwk.^r«aJ«A 

AniTke KiU» i’««l vyllk vru^vgEng men. and. . L . 0 « f ■#* o c* • + 4 ~ n JiPl 

And Tko vvicU land. vxctL nvovtea v>oanX o*xt-tlv 644 r%! |*Kjs {©OifiX XT Z.J Hunu.Tes |va»t aio’cloeK, ^ 

1 orUv keavtK* %K*ut, fre ocxToe, tt.e groan; I 2 5?ttv, <xn d ju.'jt cXS W£ we rc^muJunjf - up 

A. on.v /itar ca Ionv. ktart”- irwken r^vo-vi 

i*n! 


BY MULE EXPRES S ! 


_L OW(v hear a Iwv. Koari-4r«k€n ’my.jiv. I H ' I f ' I 

~Wl 1 - ». ^ L f * j i . , it t (as! COl 

Where V + \\ W\y coanlry 7 ? K«a*i, wUre ilrc.^ r*r UttdH 

An.oL tkft Veicc Xr7ria.nfl5,'>». vvl»i's»*«y dr«ud., jOtuOTV to^iiQ* 


arnn. of oar j^ajaer prep ar- 


.orv U j3o‘nd to pTCiS ^ W€ received 

‘Wkat u»U Ikee-^Wkir J Art IK^ ck\tAr*n U<a*l ? v i* /. f . >« 5 ']-• , ^ 

0 tv>e most reuoalie a-nol (Oosifive infor- 

P««II«UA! o k^v.K.'A. tk;U.^[ rr ,t h\ ^ I ■motion. fUt ina^vi, if not all of fk 
»e*m% kir ircasr wkp*e ti*h Ks ToYvivevs T«d.; , ' . ^ r> ^ ? j . 

Deoil worretKan c1xcJl!aa>>« wlfV r^tv, i f edey fl^L Pr»’$ OtVCPS. PtOW ConflXiea a( 

Tka>r^lU> kfttfti who iMftHht*, Lt tenie/rtt yrvJPv l 1T» I 

n» ilie mai>PTv er-wtv iLi moiktr wove, l/AMP tO ko, « I exc‘.$ , wouicL 

Ltf C^ckan^ecC a,n2 i>v rKebr own 


»c®rrvo 

De. 

Tk, 

Ami ku.rni *K<- A H f 

And (eaves her Jo ^vw»i£ w Ike JmS 

Ani w Henc« Ike £ain< v»Lt Ink logo Barvives. 

O’er wastik Itiosuv^j <Xnvl o’er *atc *jr\d*v*d i\.y<>. 
Are katyeJL’s keCrLonvO a karlei . rorrv 5 0rv t Scrv^ 
M«v< itay Tlar* kv«« Hvitf all keantf ouS ®>*e ; 

(7am SamoLrei /v«,a.rft v -strnl l g legm\ vrifk >txd-jlier Clare, 
T ham. o 1A fnStuL of our ‘afler'a iayf ? 

Ch al( ik halls fke ©ti, ©li Ko>ne replace, 

Ov gtCen. l>» rtk» oar father** graves eHKue?^* 

ainat i <k*5 priests rw«.v t>»vihl on Xti tvix-nv ; 

Mercak stil skiines fK« ckeruLim- 

San l a Rat’s a ee.vt ynavt dr*p from. Uebree, ulenv, 
Qur I i r a*R iwiil c vvK*t«° iwvil? J tr u.i«lem . 

O Wd%N»ingt<r>v ! th»w. vlrewn<t* • ar till fro)»\ 

Bxj Le^vem, Ttvreu.|i. tf\«e J oar fUw •v**g*ve*v l 

TKv hope Cu.r Uniem , amd our home* thy oifk — 

T© rhee, thvs d-av Noi*>\ 7 s K>ands vv« lift ! 


ii'nes one yvxo’ntk. T^ottv. ^U5 Xaf^j 

drRxX iKe^ ore to lea/Ye t^enr 

joYcsenp can^|d 9 'for Sicel. e^cJia}^ 

CL l>OLct tl\e I'lm o f M ARCH ! 

fEflert: ii no ct^uJLt of tfug 


n, 1 b.» • n\,TV| flowers |i'f Crou^<«L VVgu/ving*on f 

T ! ,« » [ / . i w w L 

•rO-mia. ; rrm. wmrse breast Iac outran. 


aUarm curse: 


Qal VviJivTfve ijLTvtyu.al sttift! wouil Ba^Li.’ 

H»ir 7r«>nJ»ljag Ip*, woilj We^SinJs rtWursc 
TVLxli Ko *al\ T u.1^? riv* rur^ Jiriixh^ a'v’S 

t * A'vvfll plagu ©-s Attwul w ji er« JratU •'«Ws a st! 

'Tj i | ..y j - .u. , J i c ^ ’ jT^f^ea.sete*s itill oVv ira*t»y j <iu 6 v <?r 'Ltud. 

Ii c9c ha-ni* thit jLv 9 yyrhcmvf«e drop* are rel - |A \ aLo.v’s f*«r their OLeit.med v *ir»» *‘UK*t~\i*aJLl 
WfTv OrrMfovvliri-tlood fro»T v thy CoaidVvj’s v« ; r\J f U.-.l where ^ At{; «/ freeient h^cL Ri Vr^YcV, 

0 f alhtr • W«#^ • wMf.UwJ 'VBiU /he Slavik |Gu vt's ?; (/a r . e CLcL ^ U >ul Anjd. w.i.pj ©»cr a.rch. 


But v^vlj Hu*t\ 


«AeB_,a»vJ. L»v h.v $orr#»v.*v^ h^Ll ! 

4 T. J a_. y ’i__ _ v* 


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HE OLO FLAG 




CAMP FOkd, TYLER, TEXAS, 

XL** * ^08 -tt 


.He**rv»' ft we jove^nuF CW » «f Tt* F-A(i a ^ a *y 5 , 

,ft.ick.j «.1 a. .TJic. Oiu Ayfcel^ P*r/■*«!, fa^ Us 


TdU v»-s .» irvlttMle^L ^ fie 



AT CAMP pORDjTEXAS. 


wu-s Tip -T*# ! *' 

*Tb\c I>isNcor>v«nijk.F N1 sa6»c of fk* Bend w^ili'xt 
u*idw«- are all mwc-lv iruieUui. fc* LT.WnJ»i*Hii 
F«> ivift ct>rr*cd tt-ncL J*rempf' Ca/|ih g - 

T V\\vj M?A OF LOT ALT'* l 

SAMUEL MORTON, OF INDIANA! 

ELECTEO GOVERNOR of THE STATE of 
TEIXA'', BY A LARGE. MAJOF.1TT ( 


a t a L 1 ‘ l “- v; ' v g WT Us s.'lk Foclcet erckiW- 

kc tv» I'.Y.wi wut now 

Kuivift 


lev 


vge> )re*y, 


, Ld tAi A a,t ' 

Uf 5 **"L lus EXcrfLivcs was rVeah 

• >b n^Eng . UvcL a.-N, r a\>-, 

"•*/• Ikrou^k ?K« Crowded afreet*! 


Bur ror tt, 4 . prcvence. of Srnit tvva ©y fort-t 

]>u lf-cL>u. rv*t n. Ih^Ui’o ft** FUdc»v wp *. Ui. aMfc 

•am. ewket; t. ou «F pftFv‘*otd»>\ ^dvr. We chtvw*! 
SftX,tC Wl'tU OU.r ft-cl»rv £9 of d*£j U ^«- T^wbUc E 

iXvxa. ff jm a$ ft»e, estduslwd incdvwm cf Canv. 

>t\iAAu % ‘ki tirw tr»v jucK i lnW»rt«J" 

p ytt/ferri i\il *® *Av \ a wdtt-r *?r 


a 


of tx*dtea m6 rKvoccaL 

^ ow Xxciv day* h t7 e «:^Jr th U. ai- 


fk*oc*: rttmwvftv 
Tt*.*46 ’TU.ffw^i. 

»»■«. Hu. 


vwrtiua4' r*ffcm *\g f® tin _.. ( 

TV^t- TwteF"i NNi&An j is a >*«iv vvl»V Uat 
niftanC* dfc/ivd even Ow*r vffvebw To- 


*»=«- a»»d M\i3 iI»fj ( in. kis ** h**. [F-4'’u S - ov« r * f’firatflj, 
'nAV^oOk^vw Vrva *>x*n^v, 

v \v\4 ^L»x TV« G<iv«ru«jv* • »iYuL a C % - 

ef ttfe ^jt© 0 *«i' nj? ft a SS'ri ©u*4 C»rv^‘cijonft were 

> t 


«A- l^ CL ov 


l Xl 5 


^ ti* a. r .<C »K#wiX (»<. COim- 

pcllvii. tj," t*J. l ocvT KC* it ft* to |« r£.v avvTj iu/i% 

^cnc.r^l Ovutitcr^i' *f nuit^nafl ©x a3 i*/er» u-vU>^- t 1 rvf»>* 

ivsv datable, wprttm #A Jtt < vxa.; caFed-•*— 

C<JVvfUc^ be£w«*n. f^« * r\ cL‘^»»«ri|" ottp jeorfcrS EjtCfcl 

en c>y ixrUL tk.‘» lv»s» .•ftrlj , t<r|e g>«<xF 

k <mi (“ ftvyou^ 1% c*-+y lt»e cLclv ^ Wft ft — 3° UN ° 0 i >4 1 T. 

BuT * PaOE kiirv8«Lp t*ok ft i«- ^a^eu.1 Fr*>i\ Tt*e 

(T&lU^aruL Comj^arluVft o>Jxr w o* 07ic^ re«tx»r**C. 

T L«- Go*e>r\crr ww«v* o-l" Ttv* *r©trv^ K«ad o u«r»>U TnoS l 
</ LU,a>»t k.i temwvtnJLing -»*>A Ulj 
wuj! - , --S.--U frc^U po^fs <P *• 1«' 

fOl*-trt{><«*f«d V»\u-e.lv tpv*^r^» l^' * v€,Y J 


AVt 

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wivVL ao-vU. b*g«t- .T.-.jkr L r. 


>iU 


©OTEsewou’S- «<%x.r4. 


(X rk* ev €Tvin of tU /^\.L Fab., ri*<S<s ui. 
^«<i4<rx- t©ois joLace wi~ *R«rk S^MYC^ Ivr^Tfc^OS 

tfiul. wets OiiT*>ul*Ji fljl aLtS»C-3 Tt wa-f n*> arvj* 

feerttet aFfavy^ {>cvf a* Pu.bltt J »n* wk^iu* 

tk« lu4 k, »n* e« j f )*arrv tU« Gro*e*Ncn d^,-i • Tt<i &£. 
L.l^uvtt’iv^nf - —- flktvjl B fttel — ift-Xi *3 

gftnfUj .«*v —■ uJl rmrwLeJ, Fo^eT.ftr U.S TCaJU ^ 
olo w<«X*r a>»d oit. 

"T^ Ui£* u-TIraC/fcierv <?P ev^rL’.n^f a- 

mu.TTer #F Ceur*e HIV tfoyx^r &<?v. 5 ^Ml/£u 
IViJKr -5 s 3 W Up } WitK. itcieftTv- "4iUl*' :*UuP o.v 

• kAUvC Xi. feftk 'Witikwi, vv*^s T:,e tedr?^tru- 

Urix «urvoC wri4^ aJl. i [L*at l ^ ,c 

pu.rD'^aiii.r we>« MtAxk wt|k Wtb you*ikfu.C 

a * -c ui. a> r a r'-ce —j*uo ^ • \> v - ^ s n ^ 

ii*tc eLoftr^s^J especVliw. ^ 

M,** 3vicTinwiaAN. ySiftsi^r—^ 

•tv A vi‘> '* ik of T«/:an rasUiarv,/Tiot*^k 

fcEghftj otv tU V\e«mev ColtLvv.xe- 

ctr<t»s aJXrft*fllftct iVt. aAvni-raUft-iv o* ^ i 7 

' W»lt\ goti-pUst - l< kt* ilv ViOftii vOiW' ftylfl in*. +V*!;\£ 

"N ot" u-.vuJlorvdu *®t o-rvlienr aft ^ c** »v 

A. of yvinnjrt^ ^ruC65 wtJi>Uj. still 


ot- Tfiv ^ 

a t clfftifc. okl I - 


low wa, U^E A 3 « «« ^ ** n r M 

u,«t A* 7 

t^U.ix k; 8 r.^, --CU> 5 votitd Itc 

UwWTVckJ'.* >Wwre^rei— Ulb ^ rru.H^ 

tJ- Tt,. r «|pppr brc>t*^kh w* Hta-l* otvr «aUv»*^uL ’f«lUw CtF, 

izeivj W. 5. 8_.. w gu^ fjo *£‘vL #*«<t ty*f\T'n\ t» te.a.r* 

He. rr\ •ttxC f’Ci t«d muaiv Jr 


•tc* - ’sj/rt i4lXi 0>A- VxC*U <_( n \s £ 

^low<xC As <x tA Mrs Taj 

tte street iw frovP <jF tv*e. 'V\«v/ 


V^Pt was cro»«i»^ 
^ ... Wovtftc of- LT'.^oE- 

Jck'V\>«■‘■ v . ,, "fa*/' Ceivftder a.T« C-Ot>we- 

tarei-n-g- d©wTv a*i~ rack’)-.-.^ tkc 

cLtLd wtAfe kwtcktd dUwvu— lFs k«A<«L CftTrvt'ivtf 
tn Caniaci" witU tk« pftv€r>\ 0 \tj ta uJ&ecL iuxiw G.f^w 

i!~<L a fta*h Trucfv^ V/^relcftJL t* k<L«ve vtad^ 

aVuiUer Vic kad tut?kcx.d} 


-*F. ji It fti« ^oolls. 


ki'ft jnai.'luj .'ft C*abP*-^vxk\ ©r\c rru-rt. v^t* ^ftr L, ®£KTl 
il:uX tti^ Un.oh^ Kat" l*ke-a. Itu.®. Fulrvoc a 
ia”K r eSt^i'-tcL Wmft*4.VT lb 1t*e c|>tn\% of" old ^uTVcr- 
Tiine- i'kc Governav dative*-**!- tk« TbU*»tv^ 
«(o V u.«*h^ «JAr**9,nJtvr U\8 elect T^w U.xtt U^ax cl*2- 

Ci*urti, v.k'A v^/iU fc» 

.Tfsil from. tt.s yre-U- % #ivr evvlv 

• rr> l 1 ‘ • "*••**“ ^ U (> mouTt*. yyllK^W 


Tlvft. rvHew/ng i AVO t U.t^<m. ti L\ft£R~ 

Tv w <t» C*© rn , #0 v^X 0,%5T. Cnoair«^ , \J. S.H-, 

W tt* C«leUA^ + ft v and « t. Ua*xftfuIU U 

pa»3«d u.T\n*fcceX ’ 

L { B FRTV. 

M<L*»*<Le»v of tt% Fe^its Free 
Jo^oaS Likert^ I 

Net r>v |»rifte»v wall) joa, c!vk%U 9 
Tt^»*n^ F«- r Cftf»tw«&vt(, 

Rcv«>\g ove • d t iTe. k»U> 

Ckoos/a^ will JOIM- will, 

A»vL, ynadetex THa^») 

F.o ruL et kftVin^ tw>x wa>j- 

Xj «k*w‘rt^ . I olv' LiWtC^ • 

He wte Qxrtr^b ok- Ue-^.d'A 

^Fiveu-ft’k k© rnu.N Xo bike./" ii*\.' r Vx ^ 7 

r, W “T ' - ‘i N 

«A»v nv<rvMih VO* ■_•_ _ 

For aid cF 

K r.ceiir\g, feelirtg > C.» ^ « ; Bigking* - 

£*>5* Praai 


CtwC» Vwt - liV|« 


*k ' 


Ttdw Ui'ft UAVtoru^ Se^xr ki> nxoaJk v.Hj* 

_;nu' ft ' ^»*ce.C-rwL Uffj yvk.tk feo dt%Cv 

L *1 Srri Wj of tUc Ca^itet ftonv TT^se «v 

ba * -Yoo r.v, ke lifted *v«b kwT from. Ids kv&.d ; 
iookvxL tlfivv it Vi*j»/ 0 iv. TU® t Y>vTn e/>a.s «. tt. ft i 

W'It Ut > ftrou.ts itv tk’civ kttw*- Tk* worOU of »v.s*.l»vv*. 

wk.Viv ull S^crned te Ucvv© arv itvIUaI'ivc. Cow-^\tkorv w.- 
aloud" tt. l?£. uctUrod. plt> d — oy\CvS .*uodiav, > .| l At 
? stape of !k?_ pro eeeding fke outkte-sf of 0^«(a«tMl 
•XS Vu^\ It* YVvA_s ZfCfTr\9. yniuaUj kiFiTrC ttfc 
; r r Pj ^d— AiLun. wkilt i\,U tx«.vllot«v V\i e 

Tr 0 vCTVv o ^v(v\ J o^7f-LOW £ i Tl Xntii f d — ^ / f\ 


t or winnitxg gruceft *\v*CeJ. st. 

-A»-*dfr*yw. aiou*t kcr skoP du.rf» <jf v<fcfc\r*C 7 
-»vti all To Wl»k tier t{j ll \yx ytgkT. 

Q-WC vi It I v fet r Cu-m JjxmjCc ^UDied for ikv. lim« I 

To kav<- cteoded iorruft uu\|o(«,aa«*wt fvruloJu ngs iof’ I 

tt,*. in Cxi acf o7 fke Gover rvo 

of Fwe kail — vv^aKadc to H"«nor J s, 

aRfidec! TV« ft<l c gu.fi Gov 

TU*no keying in vi«w Tint ct«4viev errwwT a/* dis- 



o', >,_x vitbdt^ , (^Rv;r\tWvvl a^plttua 

‘d k lA^fv ' k»ss€£ T rpMV F.';i.ru.^Urt'| 


nor »'1€W^ .f.c*-.of*S G//^rA^d y A Voice Cfv^ui-edj tuw*uU i- ^ p 0 %*ill& : u*nat HiaFtUe firjt cWT 

's idniu»w vtkU * w.'lfv /Ku ^Tt^er? 1# m»s 'inofF u**neulr vroblt>' . 1 L~ X f4- L* k)f 

Ivi ilia iM? : L*„| < , - K- r 5n* Scvd r^-uv t>e tor fht ktyms or u* ^our-Muuh, 

.ivi «.ia m Hkck U f* tr a UiVaGoM “F> l.ul. nov 


iV3. 


r^n-f' jUy j of Sor»xe ^rcaF pakUe ^eed T ov 
a L<rrv^ Wti>d_ 0 A- k’*> SKoald*»*ft (X,- *i* Itv 
pC rFcrrr'S aw «cF #f sZescy»|ot?OK ^leaving r\o |^ 

okjecT Ik »*cw Per lh+VuAti'c g*ccL — or \Gy> o veu . 

lVu*bt* kim-.» rWinds D T>ic>it k»m *rr 1 - 

Bat of ttc Ball; TU 0/Ctl‘efd "St**i** CcUB,ardw 
hv fu.Tkfu.1 t^uLoskc of Lr JoHh WwuwXkp, 


rej» 

1 " 5Y * 3aT.- Te c Orov v ry*or J s >cyd--j r*c^*L^, ciew-r kri7 

j E ^o ike ^oi v\-d_, v* aS ckIaj o>wfc- or Hie lkeoLSa-A.^ 


n a*» |^r«sc'». r _ 

Somv i! A *<'UtnF r>vu.iiv; 

F%> 


t , vend l«tvy*ftrv- Tk* durvCcfe vliitftarjed 
tv i"k« toirxraS-2 U.>^d uS 


f#> Ike, 6o«k fr*rv wk*c U Sa^rvV. id 

Cr 


^■VvfL < f K* of’httr Cvultrs^ Ctmit&rAkj Cxklfca Jl ftf 

1 - 44. H c ScCldL— I wiIV fVvi- ^VU v! 


Ck v «rrs urvd iu.S«5 of Saf’l^a d L-,-^fc 

] c- * k\ S (l e^l-ty^ty Co Tevain l© de Mfft. A Y-er.aC? 

V.vwV* u_ vXrin.Srbvd ^ Kvvd ndklH^ l 

*t out 5 vE ^ Jjom.^ Ic., a rad be, yved *Vv tlie U^oid 

.i\A*klart\g In : »Tb^er* fea tv. W fu^k^v, l-« ^ v e t'rei^k 

af\ L(fol\ ocCAAtcm* ic v»i,H tke 3 vv-ead f'T^trv WSjfe IiUl 


_nc wk* con-.es t? Vow a wo©,n£ 
Mac7 ttt awd d.re5>ftd Ctrid deVn^- 
tit Who vvm * yiii^ l^oli 1Hu4f Ve* * 

Vl<t i cienj S mZla /v-krave?*Y > 

Hcwk^^d* l tt-ftle* a. kti* of kenev j 
^IosIa’a S «a r\<d Oil v*-nd.*^ >Y.on«jj. 
Lkattlv ftU iv w irv 30 u, '—O ®-r v.Kd O’er 
Mvtt kav<e* » rrva.JL\ ITuddx d-Tore.« 


«- pre^t^ ►jricc* r Uvt>j Sx^« 

W c wlvo ' ov Uas ii 

K «’»> lvb»vi oLf- i- »lmnvfcev UrtiVvg ; 

Keep 4,rv cm. Co^iLcitn^ ; 

7\ > iVu ad v^oict yutiX^ dCar^tes, 

You/ ant cf ng gtftric^s/ 

Ki tt *o^r jorettvj *^ 0 *' ^ Tcvv I'T'^kteV' 

W.uk,w ad a. k a/>vdi**Wie. "PgkTer. 

-- t . ■ v zse @ ■■■ ■■ ———“ 




-Ivl/WE, y«*Tj>,ANSt>eRT/vTio»4 .-We 
k-avc Ivtawl il iLvggarci tkfti* a FuHP be cor*- 
tnbwtsd uFo^fi 7 v'Yjfk a. view to fee jour- 

oar linefi ^wiiex-tvcr TU* trnie v*kaH 


^tanu. Fy-obttJbl>j ^>er fux^ r\'ou..ldc«v«r 

fk*2> P^pfn&t, and sued a C<*m kvlo Jj, lj wotvld 
lessen ik* of ttie frum.^ yyxate>calUf'. 

V^e fti neeytdj tu^e* ma-tle-r will be atfeK - 


tied to /vtvnv&bU’ateij - — Jf f\pd ^ ocme^f V 

jNT,jB Tke fearn fc"n^u.^ed fon »vov«iv^ 

E rt\« vnadVi als of lie ofj\C£ et jke OloF'lACV 

vv/'/l be l«o U.€>u.vVly iouaLed to w*erynilT utv^ 
Uve freTykh eUe fca/n, ITie EE cfetbr 

^reo^v — uxle*%S , j*e>- -civarrv.ee 




- ? V i& °n ©CCft*icm. *6 vriwt Cbt Sw<er ;'rfW' rwae vuiA-^yv •— . J-ev - 

T, iverv vyi/k SU«v* af lus ^ Vu> i .^ ? 3^ &y<ryu?r Mov^t^K |^T</fcr fey Id 



^HSi v/: 


































































4 . 


th e: old r a cg ._ 


HKW 

i— W« are 1 




ifi P«£*5 I— We are kapjvy to aunourv^t tkaT 
we k&\6 rxovv i'rv l^re^i a.n«£ *v«*H »\»ia« ttcon. a- 

new v*0/k of rcvye $eie»X*k& »,»1er«*t. Tke OUis a TIia m’aV« 0A ^" 

“4k InvSSTI<VAV>N .»TO THfc CAU»£Of OtO «*WI»*et- 

A&tc ir* iVluuc Sj*A np Sva a e sticks a 1 ® ro th*t 
ReMlxDY- V B n d. Di w^NCiw Atv», late U-b-N- Tke. 

CapiAinj wt katfc keen- informed., l»*d rvoF 
bTCvioa.skj £ fva^v >rvwe4v^ dJtei tti07V it' Si-JClfilt fi C. 
ur Uterour^ |»u,rsu.its j beyond. H\&ie conweefocC 
uvl^k Vvis — ctnd. Ik?** kc, C£a*S«- N 

worwh rrv orv^ k ‘on Tive ol&ek ~Y\fc or* mdttttd. ftir 
Jgroviu.^i4errv Tk# foak fkai" ko wo* 

kj laTTv *3 0 m Ivi* l)Ywr\>i^ k®rvvE ^ Qjnd. SLbjodtX U 
ntoivcttr-..,? ws t m.jw'rliojvnve'yvt’. _At first Ou.r OmaI 
Or aeenveJl tt. Uave lost all irvtaveef nv V ^C; 
t>U,i SO cUjfctvC. \X YTVvnoL Ootclcl TVoV aXvVO.^^ 
l)« kepf For Sonxe reo^eYtS- vf'Sfai*, 

ivkcek ike om.VK,o>* does -not mention, ke was 
fSnvov e,cL from one p(a o $ of < r,ip r\ t on inferd*to 
’AnoTker ., ai^ti kt was at /aft bvoM.gkt to tklfe 
place. On »kt »*oaX ke permitted fcj •.c‘3*- o^ani/-. 

'rrvaL MvltCck iruB j^-s w^t t^iis-JL a,'»uA.e.. He beoai^a 
IrXere&teL’ In. ttvl* animal; ke Hvou-gU" tVlfeirfe VVCLS 
SomdkVg .ooo%4yliar abou.t tl\!w paTTibu>Uf ynuU Ivt. 

ClUfyiurid. ofone- of lives e TYjcoav*^ (^wA.o ko Sa^S remin¬ 
ded (vim of So roe. jo «t 6 o.vS ke 6nca met" dCcrin-g a 
vc ^ a ^ <£ an .Afncam^irt^ ^ kot w^6 At matter 


aeLVjtcw of n\F, TeXAi market. 

^OOk TWR VAOHTVi OF<Ft&«.V)MsS,^^- 




Ashe 

Alma tvAcv - -D— - — oomM%<*vs«- - 

Np J»l« » ; . - - - - — g^*v > »rv\a4l > lou.r_,-- - 

^TT'*K / __ ___ - «. ,vr*YM KJ.f"V - 



TORO - B a RROUGrH, TYLER, 


_** (•’oAr,--5.^W 

. , M - IV --‘S'- 40 

pot3« i.SO 



>^ft\ ’mu.te ^ H e re^Li ecL^guess Ive. jUntgot t#* 
O'^t. Pke Cajot^ujv ctsKeJ_ kow k« tkocvgaf' We- 

- ^C-’ka.-rv djijivJ? k’Hovv . 1 *J* k«. CLvtkor was i^terae'S*^, 

anX Cen'n.,-e^vceX a- series ef iVaat<ms. T 
&wk*tti. h was fuJl at clifft'evjibe*,' tl\% ci*3«.ovse. »«em- 
Ip kj y o^y«ss v, ^kt along' \Vctft out~' any 
?TNh OiLUrfC { k«. Cap^at/n yvatck^L it eUj%el^-k<7vs 
^Los elv ^ tkosfe oT oar reaJ.era j wko kav« ^een turn 
on tk« kilt'si ole., kvs °y«3 rivet«cL on tke UvUo 
Tor wars at a u'n-.e , lost in, d.e<jo ^t\oa^kt 3 ca^n 
on.1^- krvow^ A( last tt»» TvtaU oU.Sao>paar edL. 
Tke CapTa.iV v\ as s^etv after>varcLs A'C^a^-vtly 

loading camps" a-noL renvaVCng long perI oA-y. 

WKat (’ee^TnC' a* tVs rruvle is -j\ot ferr u-S io o'aj, 
kii •:'t a-il t\now /v nw% mwrv- of ■« 

pu.i'&et live^ iA.re OomjaelkdL U >e$orf to, E 0 t~ 

• ai-n Tke setrtTs of- ku.rn.p.?v aru^tom^-. Tke prot- 
le>n w kiok kaff/erL kim fto long ? kaft Solv eA., 
anct Ike. au.rkor lriu,%npkantls^ pT-esekts tk« solution 
V Tki* little volamt* We w 4 si,, it c^u,LA. kwe l)«n^ 
cLone aJ' a Us a 3 ^ - rife € — l^r vvkenfullv a rouscJ^j 
is remorseless. Pe*oe le vyittv ker v<‘« - 
tiw« j rt *^> \o»s Is ow-v gaLn.. 


KtfTt v;i*n_‘ka.rJuVo 4 ei' rtou’r.-jfcoo 

i^T T r^;i?vrr~«V8 

:: - -r.;v»~Dy« 

CAW Dee S,...59--— !., kwrylr-a 5 »'* 

C*. «tH. Hom«-«t»usv» J«uerv% j -- *- - 0 

CHtCKSfVf,_T - - --J _ --- “ 

C»^SE,’tin*«U'; -- - - --- ^ 

S <?^ 0 5, -- . 

UP*J *t.»v -__ ____ 

^*£**>. - frvfo") -v pa ^ 1 ' ’ 

^ ^ f»v CoTT»»i. - ~ ___ «. — . __pe _. . 

P.NVCworilS -- ' --^ *,- — 

FVOUA, W(v«xt----* ‘••‘IS 

Fojent atU. ..-'t'oiile - ^ ^ ^ -- 4< P<wr, .. 

Ham.-- ^ ^ - - —. ^ - — - - *« ‘V - . 

Hooiitt. - ---^-2 V - 

. *-.- r.r.v« 

K^i ves, won- . _ . —--- — — . 1 

LeA®. powfcjvs (.<♦*" ♦*•0--- _ _ ,i 

UAeo, -_J- _1_ ICO i(n - _ +19Q 

matches - ("400 ;•*. *l)uj-- -- " b*> - ‘ ^ 

Mtt,At i(t, (oo/r-. __ ___ ** aai.- 7 00 

Naiv. 4 ~ ^Marlut- c iy ^_ <f iOff U« 

Ov(4-C«»i • Priv *fW A-rrw'j ___ __ % < weiffti { Oo. op 

potkto C » Swnt,- ftr k^U. iafltf 

reppca, Uaok,- ._»• ib •. ... jf.co 

Poak , • -* -- ♦* “ _ LOO 

Pape*, writing..- " «e*Te- 1 2.000 

“ants, no^y.maif , ___ __ ,f .. 5# 90 

Peach«• d-r’e^ ____U . (SO 

Pans, (•# - k< |»ei«e-. 

n- atks ( <oyHi« n ,___... K f * 

PA| kS, _........__ __ ^ 

SOA^, - 5df t- - - - -_______ 

IvatcL __ D ^ 

SwCAA, t» • W iv ______ 

%TfKiHGt . P«*ol.n‘£*- 

*• 7 i*' -o.* __ 

t oCKS vVo ol,_'_ 

HOES' _ 

|Hi«TS,-. 

Salt,.. 

^•ALiNa S«06S ( __ 

Y^SAC C o , srva.ll hAfui-f,J!er 
« wr-.i.^. «■ /eaf 


f * . - - 3oo 

.. #r “ V»o 

. _ »■ H kL. 1.00 

«> f /_i.oo 

—* — <0 



i fr. 


r ... 


Ml SCEttA ^O^gr. 

Hw.-n^ute^ of cUj5'>^«n Vit 

TVe 1tvov.k. Ijtr.B^tev owns ; 

v?v ot tke StT, 

YaP^enviUn^k rV.as*^2? e 0 f tc 


.n sjoevr Wa M|J S.~ Undou^tU^ L*V 

-1 , ■■'■. 00 Zt s - 5 i\ tr 6 ' ve andlwAneJL 

'1#^°^ mkat\Unlt of ttus [kaeft. y^U 

tve keen <ajtc.iv from oar rm'-dU". U l-Ll.J... 


Ik 
L 

J-t* 9 eu-i't r< 


midAl',(nj tkaf relerctUa* 
t 30»r rrvjontirs, P>CMano*; «V<. tkt's 


‘wt’jr __ 

*r <r Se^Aks-- 

11- AKICS, (rmalfj_ 

Toofk Bntffke *, 

Thread , Une>v._ 


iti 
— 3.00 
H 00 
. u fair ^ & 

. ‘ “ rs. VSDi?^ 

. w ^ecte z o-oo 
_*' 4w*k- 310 0 

. n pai» . .. * 00 

a »e«e<? 


.-I .00 

__ « .-.2-10 

_ u H . 

_M- - 1 * 0 .ov 

___.•* ^i<« — jkoo 

fcor->n\»r0- “ - 


2 SO 

1.00 


WH/SKff y jfpo.*v article^ __*’ ?<xL .. 

“ ' J'.rvglc otrink ah KctvitriA-‘‘‘ a. S. 


). 00 
S.00 


BY U G. TELEGRAPH! 





Ai 






BY THC- 


\U 


be a.on.e , w« tltt.'i-e Hie 'joAX HitAt o4ee. 

seviW'r ev c r ^ ^ tr5u ^ -vkttfee*- x S u4,- 

s^ibftr lo Fu^sa of ivof. TKi* i% tWe L»rt. 

«S. al\i ,u.fe»t Vrix^rvev- of OcrvjxJetf.yvp tV«, 

listj covA. we ea.y w «jtL K 0[ . e xU. will 1 «ecV.<Q« 
vLS ac above. ^ 

GroLi sol'iA. cm 5tk Av' 

an.M.e a-t A^cTtoW^ bv HammowP^ 4 £0 (»r 1 ; 
C*vwf*ole.ra-<& > on Fri .Ztft -, 

1 0 we tnow tkat C^ajot. Jekn* 
^cVi-’j tnccl^ l\as got Vvepkews ^ n‘<eees1 
3 lqo u.ie we know ike. is A'JnT'C 

Dclvvi.xn 

SEp^T'/RM/ua AHO GaRViNQ. - CAfT. AfAOS 

SON, ass’*stci trj- kTSt-cUss CLrtsts kas engage* in 

tke‘ Lwsi AOS cf Casing Pifts. A specl^n oh ni* 

work m. kcll>j- - wood., rn iC'g be v Wv c^ojoU i a^ 

to tke <^<gw‘ngOo7n»n*lfee / TBe*srsCl.t.'HorTa-tv<L 
X3 ifc.4NOf»ANri. 


B EB WZ*M' 

1m yirta^ of tke aafkoriYy )n ^-ke v e«deA 
Consti TviTion , it is krr<i^ oral<r<cL “fi-Ap an £leot*>-*v 

of CongreSSmrw from tJw T*<a% lake jalac« ^ 

Vday ? (Y’.arcm 4tk., J5C4, «a(oL Officers to be AwLj ck* 

5(!n b^ lk« Lov^ al Sap^» ©-rte-r-s of HiS. C#v. 

Samugl Mohtcm. T* k« Polls to be open. from. 
Seen- cep to san'jel - of Tke same ckcxy* 

Xt »a also or <tev€* tka-l" H«S E<<?alUw«y G»v 

er nor Caccte to be in forte. a-P tke Polls ou. ^k«u.t 
Tke fent-vre ns a. «-3o/ GkAaroL" a. “force 

of no leas tk cvn ivvcn/^ *£ve atmeoL men, 

ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 

P RESl DSMT. 


Wm-H.S £w*qo 1 

«or etlu 

I 


S«or«t<Lr^ of State. 


,in~ 


SV ffY is Lt. Gow . A IfcfDv'CAWNLC T 

M^nslo-n on T\'?tk Avenwe l» l<«- a foilse^ki 
Sw| ^ortfiT ) 


Tv ew 

star 


‘ AH&:'^9 eCuU ' Se ^ °~ t CO'cL'-^earX.^ 


.n Ootn nU cirvoc cxtvX foev<HU\ne« of Mu’s 
f>ort<xn f Order fr ovn Hve t Testert } W-o Uve l«>]bub- 
liwk Tka following 


Gwft.a^ATxjft HPA- Cti£e«, 

Wat«« St« ee r, Fo«\dPcw^o^ch, 

f®LL0W CjTiT.eft/s ? TfcN'As, MA«e*UT, UGf. 

Xn Uo«n jollaK®^ vvifk tke 4ponAg crXsr 
fj-tfTYL MteTER Age LtNKON^ I 1c noW k^r^.o^ OTd<tr 
tkat Saixl eleekfton ta.\k flaU cU Ikere Vv or - 
iiered > ^ ^ HTtkvr rrvo jL-r- 7 Tka,T Prove Mxrskxt 
R.H -STOTT Bee on rke jool«s 

w«ttv it 4se of (crvolt 1<£$>S *tkc.n 25- A lie 

BocL'ecL men £ -reserve Ike (oelce. 

Xe^ticL Lender ml artd. tke 

Pu-Uic Seel of fke St <vlt of XVta-^., 1 

S. MORTONj 

R.C. Ayytkd-rv^ r diveryvor. 

A oo*r ^en’I . 


Ne:w advertise ments. 


‘G-oSA^LE Yo 

watch-maker ^jeweler. 


rH£ "FLAOr! 


!% n . 'M 

SECOND OOOA O^FiCG OF 

(Si. 8_ Paaasouj ^ VtM»A£n-A », Lanes, f ans^ (ta., re¬ 

paired at short jvotic* i AND on ReAS0WAftt-£ T5RMV 


IT: '^sr 

^5^1 MAE^rAeT0Btr 


Every description of 



RtFERftNCCS: 

CaPT.J. Pi w iN^fHANj a-M. Ensian R«TIN 0 UD 5 . 

AJ.tf.BU6ANNE,£_Co. 

fiCT T0M5 >s 4'V^HRANTh.0, and C>%vto b» 

-»• \J»«Tg^veciNft a oN. Mav. R.C 


M-8 

Capt. a mo# 


k ‘WTRE'S TOMR HMLEW 


TKe fine Brown Kare Mule“ ROSA', 

LrsA Iir o-ll Hornes* aivcC ie- 
i't + u.nd«r Ik Sadvdlt _ C otnrvoE be Sarnaw** 
Lv mCeU’denee. TKH hue avlmaL 

V 9 , \ e 3 \ s . 0%mer Jc CntfinuL \t> k<$ quar^ 

■ >d71 ^ ea^-m>t Ukc ku dall^ motented. vxdkue. 
i: 0 p. T^A^R-'T tCta L> A R-S erv^wirc. of tke 
eTofcneLors or Ttve CiTrlj»v£R N bTAfru»»., roar of tke 
^ nk Aveiv^e. Hoax e. 

^ ONP?P ^«ATEXvroNey #560 

or in. '5ACAS, ^30. 


Y*’*On*.iA. aro n®w reo^ol^ k fvtrntrk ext sVot' 
(?oX f'IGStG Ffffi, D/iNClhtt, Cp»vcertff,^<t. ; ^<.. 

ent TvcYtUtsaness 


T txfc iAn.de' 

^ol~ yxdfi co 

^ rca»ovtaOU e^tkek'res 

or rvfeXferoJ o 'M'pn.ey w ill a-irkd - . 

■m 13 TvIAY, m. rso-flar V ; ,w *r 

■RAV.MAR S., Ba-nit 
S.E.THOMASON, FUr* 

_ E-J. COLLINS, Fife. 

J^tESSO^S 0UTHE8ANJ0 1 

W MiWo 

COR. PARK ROW sK»5r», AV. 
■ERMS:- REASONABLE- 












































































































: 









fjVVVlY Tfi«* E'rtvajiu'l r«>H This OLO PLA tt_3 



®d®B) oamr, Bcwtsm 

*t fke f -to A»v ft wt -Howie- . .U- .Tv.- c;d' k'KUnhf. ev 
** f>M >c^.k»ivg n«gUF X.^.iutMu.g vv.*rt Tisor 


OR/ 


ly *k* Jamet% Jvit*. 

; r "'*" - • 1U* 


oxb derive tk«in U aj,pi\j 

n*/ i* fi*ed »k a I onn Ct'.iMntf xxr/ %v\% 

4 Vi/n ^' ^ ’* a fall, "Inoj-etfiC, W cbU pxrt*-i\ US 

^(MUr w at ^l- graerfid m car riatK . «., .d a* 
>\ U.iva V*>k«- f-rv fva.tu»r-*. <XS H 0 TU\t Old /\ Wie k’lintd? * 
t vV i* 

Uand k 
X^VaUc 


on 
c .fi 


i*B •< U.elynxci» tr vy. 

ru* fiddler £«yv<ir «j( 

u'Hi v\<f « .. eki na Yv .J ^ . 


lUr £«n<Y*|ly plays fitr Leg >iuu , 


«* AW 910 * 9 I ,. 

i fl-n.t;uoiy 


*!jr r \V K% ' ,TK - tv-aiar-c as n ovuVT Old JH* kimtxlr a att,n<* d7Y«\i ^V: J»W ,Jv. L 1.1 —*-V. 

W,K x. S^de UfUn'iUu U M X% dtwnk, wkiU cl ©ay ,pjnJ: 

^Jk^rek.e^ it^T k;- *rrlV ^ ^rax* of a J , K * U ° > 4 ^ # z ^ 

meani-viV gWe, pa1.es k 5 H«Vt» 

Uoectlj ske rifles fro»Yv U*t icah c( va«jv , , ^K fc 1‘^hof K* Uflr r.r« Ua.ith a a*rJ 

•edet ink tW k*vt.>«-, a t\ A !.M> oJUy u ft. "*v*JWs, 4t IW 50.1- 

l c .-UsTlv Old. f>W*d ‘jf r bu» *rCV ftlo^ fkfc TQttr-. . _At ^^fS- 


ATAlI OF TaiMYUWES ANQMIOItS OF FOK£i CJTt, T LX A ^ 


DY rWE IGVH , t>. K. 



VUSSFEER 1. 

THE MIPNiGhT PHCvvefK 

HjlfL! dost Wear fall 1 

Rn op 



PLy 


cA.«xr 1.’ \»e ^*kr«^ t^n.c.1*«.«a ! . 

^B-Akjs u Vwc - rUc^-jiL}~ I 


•*• t . i I I t- f fL-Xtv, A* <xy “t ' 1 All ru.sk«.A. t% u*kV*.y TUe parvat^r 

[ U<r?viU rj* m*»rru4! 1 us > p^'f cMdcUik. t- u . I . a i | 

1 , 1 “* JLoor, avid < Tn? if'k't »Vi^ iTr\p<TV*iTTA,bl<, 


T H »-|l « r W .J I TL 1 t^F 1 kccX wtaitu VJ»«^U rUn ^ 

* ^ S i U Uo ^y °‘ Y uAt ' , ^ U4 r , i ” -orTK^ Bvvl rv., <Ug wjni Ctfnvt Wl-f-»> 

» fierce notXW&Y wMsUiA a. >H.urn.ra «U|t [ xC w ;ll te ‘Atoeevl to own. TU Wow Vwyi-v \U >n« 
fk* H.«OY . or tk- sV<Xe ^'^5 of tv* ink abihfcnTi; ckavwC <i* Son-if'-taw 1 K>\cn , A a.r 1* , I Vcav^ ^ 

ar Forj, Lil^, ft^rvcL tk« weevry 0*>vicrc^h more «ol«u^ I Ai’ci fev norxorj ami r»fko * 

1'u.o^ewl — >\o\ \\y<. o\i flnvt lock^io-V.—. MVoi* t uyn «- —. . 

%€. l(VYge loo U,lUw.v^ oixlus WhwLL, i i •I c \ u l nop j eL u 

, * c> , , ; S^»A^OnV Ihtwmc Vv^SeU- »rv. l» 


I "fc«i d<ax*«it, 
ocul 


tL« Ser^cnF of ike G^\»a*-«k. wv pviJ. kis £uf|nf V(* 

UF still do StY (lUu,F L<& f or |rv ci,r«*«L»>o ti 

«. Tl I / * -> & 

• »>< s ?r v»T «. 

wUn ht^Vced J YYvor<-v 
vr ricvvv wul 
Tl»0tiv Ue toilet, au.T, 


^ a - M tie "S. C 

At n^t onel^ kov*.> u ma.i\ kave U*> v 

S^^oUwkj vvon^gk;* wa^ J H t .^ktL« YYCW 
dreds of rtv^s Vcoxktt CUnj Hr n« 
f . . in a Confederate bUr^ct; <£r*„, x cio.^ljoU 
kit face a-t a ).r^Uct',o,y aga-ivsh tk« LK-nd vnmA 

ttUcl slczr. L*ef“ u.6 follcv/ tLiC UYK.yv . Wk\i dot* 


SuJ^onlvj lh«win^ k-r^ttU-' »Y\ «■' 1,^t/^J o«^5 

icru . ^'A w*^ l ^ •u'' d_ A lfcwd.r sWark , anf f ** : 

CatxU fY H'lVoe vVt»tiri a^«ov l Ij 

Wi U.V. U U. Vwk^N a OS Auto «4» TI'M s«)nff 
is bUilv Amcs . ,,w>0 

CKAPTJ3K HI . 

THE LtAflUE OF 0LOOD1 

E t af j "tko gLt p retV'Or <>V tko 

doov of o l O^e plfeouy # (oo k’Wtf kouS« on * 

ParkS^u.^>-« j vvf will * Y\t*v V*^ 

did a/" H\« C^o.t ot aur AysF C <xt 

ihz'f* . rf tkat" # 'CC«AYr‘vna> w’.tkii> vn kiak. 
^T«aUy jS,or.e«viA S ou.r ... 

eat«d oitou- n.d a V>i' < •r'i T -* u 
il* d.ien ecs vnlal-vuMO Uokn'o sot 0 / 


-A. r " /£ , low. ttirdllYvi, jLt i I Ivj 6 Uni V;l< wa.S 

Ord.! 1 All TU.sk.tA. \ u/nWr tke p— 

docr_ av.d <mr 'J*Y\J »Y k Tlt Ttv* irup* 

JUtrWm%JeUtlcT ^ 

u /h ttslk ti Ua*YOVw u|» tk« kovdi - 
F «(ic tk< k^it l>I*«d 

vvtiJl <j<S, likt starx. stA.T't’Trew. tk«AT 
TUkndrU Omd erwd^od 'otK® <“* ^ 

And exti. p»arliCvJev k*’‘t #tar*<L e ^ 
L •’Hoc wills wp o^v Ik e fver£u\ p U/Jn 



>rrt w *■» 


— V*.- 1 WI1LW -rv.fc nuA-n . 1 f r\W a® ) 

Ive doAge tekiTvX Hu>^“ / CXrgc oLi mlmty f AL’R^lyy 

CDmcs tLcd- ^tL<Ul/u^avvof tUe niAt - mow us t.or Met for kolli ,L p V r .s< Ttl'T'Y M 

\,V'.-. T. I la r v . / - , , • . Ag *i « new oo-mer s>«pftd »*»5* tV^Y-r v»“\ >eUi. i ko evNliYO blOteK a.o-n.AP Ik* L/NQMiKTKDnA'- 

C'Unwx H^yLov— ,f vm^st l>e kitn tUvS jlfet^ ^ orio-4,. ( k u # , , ,, '***pp«d «V «. biu.c oLoof of m. nded S>noJk<, 

%,nd fl utvlo > Ovt-Y fl\«^ blw£- %Lcet dv< slisfraded »» 

^ufas »y«»T< vainly ,\\^to.vorir^ f© Oatf a. w«t i|ai\- 
litl ^Fko %nt«r«. eW<rr\lnt\ of tkvt“ poLodVai 'rr\,<x*t- 
Sitn. o«s«wpi«d tk«. TDu-Vo. of W^lji-Yvgr'^y. arvcL 


TMt CO HP U*G*fc*TtoH. . 

T was (V feoL-rfJ, ^«t. a spUnolCi^ji^ 

a«J«. In rive Yn.dth of tka Cn^ocnekW'LU 
iV& a muvk a>v4_ C* *n mox* an ffloFrw vrf l v {C'W ♦nvol’* 
nK opod 0 .U tt-« jLlttyiaf of Ford Cltw a Ftr«« 
V 7 wv.d< balaftd t.’^UF was &WV*xin£ wrlk 5w«k 
lverT»oL jleti 0/1 ti Caast cOlcW Ysok>^ po.v«i- 

■mo*wt (k< *iT««tk t© 4 1«a>Y\ V»L% moltoYv 

l 4v *. f ^9 Jr ng it\ a^pVelSc ptlts cf rod i!*- 

tum’« now-S *T* aYt7y/r t*. s 

} A r«*T. be CoylFI /at.cn, r 

W >NOAOKTIoHa-U 

, 1 «n 4 . b{u,c sLoef of Yn* nded S>nokt 

and f l ^ OvO-Y fl\«^ blu^- %Ltet ditfrouifed in' 

$ ^ufas wore vain.lv 



Now fk< 


♦ Vv^stenout lit -p T owltr fOumes 
' Wa 5, ^ d ¥»rk 

»»i 4 

_ dec 

»v\ ck ogv. c row s w] FLo x ~^"t 

f<r" ^ t r, . v ^ t ^ TCAo>*\uintf tu^ 

P^ , ’ S T ^ ^ p-'fi -—- riie deer if. «p a ncJ. ^ and. 

Ke ai tap j» ears Froy>\ «vr 


^ --y, cresset a p.yr.„ x d 

Has.,^ ,v #a a t. tkeycxr of a ]oa v cnc..5tor^ 
siWt tkoSte vrltkin f,rajni*»,sn 
two . fkr fe < /'rv^eks^ a,td «. dec^ 
r> L 0 IX.) L U c. W. ^Le/Vv. C row s witfin x .-Tfk< str 


lung 

✓««Ud. 


♦ campatked. ‘tprm nic.it- qirp. 

(■ f ".I* ,r, *4j' L V 'V 1 T o ke dp e^nd 

•k a '^ YVv it On tVv« ata-rr^tkAr J .ai ant r \« l t u*'’ 

vv'lK nve ,v> tV. g NAfavk k«xt wkjc neoerts a> 

6t ir»n and w^owc kamde ©TOW stronger and mo 
•t *dv gf flow oF bio* JL . • • 

Bloco! Blooo ! *’®> , i«d o^e afikr u n*ik©r, ir» 
aTnaxarvvent if T> of StmAewkcth of kerrer 


^lAv rBl.oi'! Tl^A l.f* lUoA Hv'wJ;-fI.».! / 

Com a fV ^a^old _ vvori^n tVi od~ >< YwwAF* , '' e ^d 1 

\dl* 

. if* Tor ward. IKoS« wko wow-Id. idenf/ 

k. HiQh -B.RD’i U*ai/£ or Blooo'.” ^ 

ward at rr* 

«Cev dad ! " 


bonij a rx- y a oU* »vot>yo 7 \ iVi <m y e- rrvw^l rv« 

r*jo*a,t tk-xr Fjye latter <d w> v A • l w «,>\ h 

r u Y * Ship fov war d. fkoS« wko wou-ld It 
k> H iQM - B . rd’i L £AC>/( or Blooo'. 

At jk* tUt wkolt vneved f$r' 
fv« Cki-«P Cvt ed , , 

■"Tit w Jl — (ftt it le <0 r«c»' 



caiA^piod t\,«, d)wlfV of VVe.lU-yv^vy^ a*»vcL 
UiS soeT 4 wu.p YX-pT®.} to tVt day^uri^ elertvorsh 


-- j . ~ i, J ’ *"»■ » *».u ■ vjJ ffVW 

^ a H l»ffH tasar*,EYvtt mioVvT kxy«. 
l*«Y\ tV^ star \ cd inmatet ^wildly writix 

on< UaneL V'v*pc*ng t)Uy m wktblvourflxf 

ti kxve ^ «*ootWd U rnwrCy tverx Uv* denvyr^ of 

A>s 1 i“v■ k*n\9«lf. Vainly w*yi 1\&t «^Wrfe kvrcUiet 

■for Cvid , Cowlol |> «• di‘sc«vn«d tVe ami idL L? Jy*lo%n- 
«*yy\<K Q 9 P aiyr\ ^ 1k*n i n an irJtT «Vlfr.o 
fJk^ ■'■isJ.f k.«.T cUpamard " 'ivlwU aF «v 

derm^r w'«ndcw j JV* R H 0 -k . *RoU-k,^IuL-U« w tX; 
"Rf^.^vykt write! Fe> tk«. Ty xC■ Ry^ %r-for ' was tr- 
deaVDYn^ U rt^LoncX'W kVmself fke imktn^ma 
" ^ *3 C'k^xt. ng IT* tXYoiee R(<4 tkc dyiyi£ \wxyv. 

j r ^^ ,or n 6W + ^' n< ^ 4 ?’ v> ct rnttk arvd plcx)>drV« 
diir^ on. Tk« ♦v«,rlM,yn sf HIc cruel wa.r. X't'afo.^ 
lvif>ed cl kEa-rF-Tevdirvo SC^ne 1 .Tke, kay^d* 

oujy £alla.*rvt“ ^r.emftyC cdrnosf fa^Uol ti\<tvx aF“ 
iKis vriut'j but lk «>5 were tallyi'Aj ah fkr sfetdbrX- 
0.K Skouts pf Ftj»«TiYX-)vKtrU vi TEi?el fke ffcmM 

vVktK^ Q. ksvY * f l- 





HcudS / w av *ar lov«I^ k <r p« n< , Vlfy* \Jvi.id'VWlU*>-Me-»\o- 
Dx .i\4 (v. en^a-gted ,>, tl. del*ci*.»t p aatTrn* «h SbY©k'r£, 
<x p , p«,! ^ 

tke uSjJtrani’ fcr 1 k.d ka.nd kad skw turwJj 
im#, 'lj ttutm. one wb* jkacL Uer aJL->wosh 

to n»*an«»* ! r Tkl« vkm\ — of p«w*.>fvd fYarne.anoL 


were Oo-ym.®, and toe. la»h A xyf o\ ikaf fn. r . % T* V m^ 

r* v . ea7mj I e«ian driyuk— Rje Cefree — wa> XnirvVifcl fur !! 


e war wU,o*i« 


l # ru - % Vj apovx tkc tniAr- 


a-h 

wc 



U «■ ar [5 dfniC.ii onCjkis stnp’dnct vku^vli'- r u.l| y iu 

Tkc faiv o< »-l trcw\U<.d for tUe life »f ker darli 


Bl ir44 Mftiiekate 


It 


We. vv«uU cleSerUt oyxt lovely ke.>©*‘na., lu.1” ky\#w«‘n^ 

eur ii\at.l.tj iL* Urr luiwt^ of ivpojon ju<tcty 

C*n enlj refer Tk« reader *6 tkah pothion oP^-MiWItv*! 
Pxrxd^iE t«•th , win* civ Jtecril^ U< y yn.ilkr/- -t^a, 



CHAPTER 7V^. 


^ r?^ iuJ3k ^ fiTine iavvcc-i. /^fvi' 

TV* tU^j ,ani. toe akui Wu 


Thc L 


o w en 


T/l, 


UVl o H 


) I 


I 2 

lo 


r cutI^ Cdn-olle-l«fkari 'nofort^u.8 
Dane® H ouSC of J^Ln^Son. tit. Cc, — 
daunted H All Corner- of *Sa1te>^ .Place 
and Skin-kcna AU-e^, W ^^-tv To fill WitU 
tk* f XKcv -Twerx o-f ^ f*Rx v*A«, injT<d 

of remainah lUtir UmeiV ♦n’ha rtai>v iu 
in^ and /nsfraahTng fkf 1 «wi fc«* ky '•- { J f 

-f» m-. Ii.« •;'' r ' 1 -i 

^'kags. xre » be fowrvd. Tv.oKUy .n l**'*. at { Ke f w J . 
kcvdL pfacas , d cly\ t iwi to toA vL t lniH €xS € ^ _^-/. 


fkfi cCy daw fV<4~ 5 tVey w/>re Surrc oAid^b^ 

tnvudcng war pu:d^ *f Ckoc.ta>Hg Cr<d<$ and CLcr- 

CHAPTER VI. 

Trie r ft a Q ' j! ‘ | 








OMATiAVVJCS ^eft-TViei *tv1U« 

CTi'msoh I'^Lf end w c1\oyoA af ^elt and 
v/vke*ps ahfrii;l<d every (tcccrh* A full 
plumr-vL ClucTtoin |eL M\e Cker ok^CS, 



































































{ 




“T M e OLD f'L AGS 


K 


FOR THE OLD 


AN OCEAN ADVENTURE. 


BY HARRY H. 


Auft,c 


i rh* s vwiA 2u~ #f IUW*»h~7h«T^*<i Roller 
ij ^~] ’Tl»« Vi*f^*V of t/t^WIE<orv<A, pttv** W%\* Ar> 

Yl •« N ». % aw Ai. m W> •» m fa 1 ^ *» .X Vlii CAV^f . 


SLr. 


wan lht, n»at\*w OT Tvo** iwe WigM^ oack- 
«iyt\. of hw^t" rviU lXt\A. WOtl i* W4Vi*uy of C Pi Vlll - 
<*»o5 t^-CTiTv.^ . Bu.E "tke Ckoeftvv It*.© der wir 

VvvowLdL* ler< tkt. '.%T wp p w llatUn of 

UMBLl“B£f, arui Jl^okLi In >u,A^ i.porl’v. and 
deeds of dteadfud m ote. "B^kirwA kit*, Came. 

0 «^Hi^AUTHA,'tUe C-'leader. rn. a rt.« dr«Ja v - , , 

* . .1 * , ■* n«.Asv*T»t«.» ta m^wm 

TtU g<-oY\j or vva-r- j»uAur. p + 

If- >>«. -m«nera: tt? U «Jl SWnul .?*' Jfa ‘/HIL’E o-ciVg a« -S'.gW 0 fficer .rv 

to*ri tk© TyoOA. A puAr«%lt>\*ctly 

■fitfei cal as a.*Wkod*r f rom. CiYv- 
einnalti, tat t-ea-% ladeivwltk <x 
6*.r^o of Yrve»*~p°' r k and ‘n\3s'i0t\o.Ti\s for ^kt Va 

TsltnAt,_-TL followVng &C*-n©. tk^k place, wk*d. 

kat yt«v«r lee-n revealed . It was A.ucri*v\£ 

one o { tioSe le y\g 'tropical calrKt vvni'ci u.r« to 

if*klo tk© YvaujtiCaX tra.ve.U'C* y\oE a. ruffle. A»*- 

-e 


ke f ate - “facts t "taken k^ &u>pr»V* ; (I'.kt 
3 y “k9Vj.ar Ci'ty ^ were. Complet'd^ P aval^xed. -De.**- 
*t*n.j skook ker dYea_dhu.l fln^S- Jrl troodl«i 

over tU 30 «*jvc,. "Muer^ ■; led. l<^ rjL tk* FiTlt 

Hofei 3 CLa\dl dies putr’s dark pcairns s-ettleA 


a U a-xavcd tvvd of 


pt^ 


•rnv 

vrxnvt . tsmi. *. clay- 


r Tke ^•daT>t«a ^ava^e, wk© tor*."ti\« tovctvd\ v>i >^amJ 
wKCH« M AmB tVf^ad. SaJi-<.X tkc ^enllr v Dei^v. 
k*,r ^tvO c^* slwtelid- axA wa» draw.w^ gu. 

You.rvi *\«,r fix volUtk^ tempiafi lui 6Y7*a»\^u’i Uftd £e«xjo-, 
|T ^ kn.«P«^ vv^^v ^ rvotU ancL stalwgy^ foTnv 

OYokc fkrow.^k ti»e ranks <rf red dLtVrvr 
ion.-vo.ee. YA^ on Hva JL«n *f . 

r jf *«' t^r profitfor-llu l*wfal WUwel- 

o mai geiifie Weli<n%! Tt y^owned 

ftK-kStard Tr^y<IU^ — Sir HcnriCi O’Deic.it( 

*V‘TU ona townol U« tk*e€ kurntrad anal 

i €*/^ and ^a^koncd kvs SpotvS'C- 

w, '^ivx °yv^ cXrr>v j wk»lst~ tW otkcr tyawdiskti. 
a.wa» cLa ; v.k\u. U UaJ. fTrm »T«W„ 

^ r l,1 ' l J*5f ^ U. 

^llOTval JVrTn. or OkCH< -MaUTHA^ k« in 

Cl VdOt fi (tt ti\« Voann^ 0^ C4V\ i. w v*Ayt,;'h 0 ttr»u« ^ Oe 
T T^Lct&t O.TV koan or HvceVrv ti 4e> Vn^rtva -Pr*' 

at -5 Ulw —— 

^A.vau.nt 3avaaje! 0->-T'> 

- VVte a»f tfe w< .f' d«.™<r^4.cl Tt.-R^d Ckufj 
O.S U I'clceot'til kloodfycrm kis ijoyv kaJ'Jid'and 
glaYecl ah 1h t it\r rt ^ole-n. 

Cto 8E CdisTINuE ta3 




FAN0Y-ORESS 


tucrUd Tke pjloeil JL Sat^ace of fL •cea>v -A Ur# 
| lo^k of Tartt^ t«*»xi»vds s w^re Sakffjity# fkei 


yry llltlT 
r a wkcuI e,, 


delta al« a^pek‘t%4 Trctn car Co 59 

we kat ct ftw edav 8 ^Tev«©uf\y det^ro^ed. 
de^^rc^ ctevvx 1 >oolt<x ‘vnovemC'nE of our jkj--soal 
wkiej-. entered klj v'laUj a-rui J\i»\ 

to tjJler !u* oleali. Jiriek ^ oend em»t ra.lv.-tov- 

;<N of (Usd a-nottailow, v\r KJek are. U, U Tk*. 

Aixute cf ft* j\u ! ttt'«. ^ Kad a, ‘ ,ra ‘ r 4*^ 

tke i^Nont e-Y-vd or baw-Sj«»d rnj vTTn 

carved wVi leafed tken-fn. 5 C.rvd «+ 1 TiTw^ltr 
n'gkli^ y vvat e-r.^e^eA -V. r*eo. dir^ a, Sp«aak of 
\A/« H • 8<'Varil 4 wktaU 1 kad Eakevv. <Urv*n-. n\ itr-f 
karvJ ti\« vv€e.k joreviwstj. 5*r«w., ea/nv and 

w»p«A.>aT»<r*~ .f »v«rj tkl^a «a^>-«o(. tU 
rnoxh nckiiit'rd.i^ vmA* m ^ vrk itU ^ t f nAY’*. 
nof tka <»k’tilv t© Aefevcle. . 

^u-tideVUv a. C'rv rf '5atl Ue» or>.ti\e 


t T ^l s T lQ ^ • - T ktrt Uave leeix 

^ k'nife in tki s Carr^.sinse 

£ l*fy h ^ €r ' C ’ vev s lt! ? JT Ckws 

^e,v oh wlvklv Lt.iUn Wocowaico kccs 

kmvSalf Oom^UhoA eagtvi" *,{ 

I ne rva-ml-cr of 2 Pfpe& txrrved TwF/ OuS 
Tr«ar aC ftftvv tt. arrive-A. «-l* f it not l^kcvv 

T Vv-e. H w-vv dr < .(\. — kotfc of V x » • A a-nd cTcLVj , 




7E-^C3 

YMN^SCUM. _A mutde ttrea- 

>vgHvner ka-i keen ^Ycd^d ah of'Wai^ St 

aiud O-Ytotk^r 

T ecble <9T M.«.vac»A.VC 1* Utlomt Ktw« 

or 4raw«rJ oh wafCr- olivcL £•* tkoao wke art 


^4 oeen erect aT Hve^-Tbol 01 a4fi> aI. 

IT Qnt <*J~ tt\t ffot” 6T Piftii Ave'av^e , 

^ooct who 4H 

AeUcatc (; Lt*.crt7\t "Uw^rj ©f w«<i r 


CLtkLi ^i 


ew.3 . Snow, 


^k, h» m. k»tk 


DIED. 



iPea.ce t* k.'s du«fj 

"VWva lUnfBt L%r\t<*ji s; 
-fc£)3 9 o wcl^ w« /fash 
OurUCAKl o«lD JO 


Uav^A. *rni»^»> KcaJl 
S^OlU tt\.s Soi, 

of I 1 rest Wcod 
TWaI- veits altk^oci 


S VflaeON A.J.C aMMDiftSj 0 f IL -4i? p Miji 

Va|s , cuh CampGtAocs, Scjoh. 5lfc. /^t3. 

x!d. LiT.^B.T!lBAtKTi-cTT^ Masn.VeU v 




Wd.uti 


w€.ai,?ke,r U«v !' wai kexs.vA ^r*>n c#«k'pii] 
e*i« A tr 

£vc«. u> 


A tiift Captoun t iH it* A^h- 



wiff te given on. 5 atwrdav E vc.HiMa y 

Maro\ i9 tl.,1 <x,)r 

j^.GooaMUSI® U ft« Fori 
Ci (\/ B anl, y) aned fke F * t AXI ct Gua.vanh- 
ceA *\ 


t.'rrv 


y«.T 


a!C^ v 


lah Lt. J .W. Hu vise Y, or N.Y.V. oek 

tlfk. IV(,3 . 

-2 c< . Lt. MatHiAS H ay^ 5 . i? 5 "- N.Y.V. Och 

ie tk, IJW. 


** H ot at •* wrt« t f 

fort an voic^. S^T^ec u> ©jt.X Hard eff - ^ 
S^BkJUltn^ -S«.»k5 alow +-* 4 . aUff, D **.vd up 

a*r\el f»f tti* jll tmis ker* T^h h% 

tke wt’ixd-l* afl of wk'ck orA«r» were <*e - 
CuteA- n\ ti.« vui d?t ef fk*h to.Udft. Cjdkrv vvkvek, 
a^ifated tke. tlu.>nter''ng deep. 

Not O. tfreoilV of «.* > A.il/’wrWed tk-e n# oders TU*. 
fkijit Ta pidij tUsaoL eack olkrr j\J! ivcrrvd^ 

were oaiitd Ci csTtcd extked vf ws'.U 

Stind lkc(‘> hrevv« CeVK-rr\^.s.d«-r ^ w^ek W o* 
answe-r-tA kj ttve nrWfcl. Ako>jf av\A l\«Uk or 
tn©Vv b 4Tf twltVirv a.r>j dmtn^ (rrave s<r.<d 
tarS .'vi W5/11 y<4i,*Ao-hscl. $k\’pV TU strAr^>U<ri 
coah^o^kei w»H\K\ vikUam. AjitaTvjre. • aV ^<*A^.nr 

5 V,-| 0 . If WAS alowh Z T. M,; fie tcrrek’trg Sun 

was A eS C -C'rv.oE l nj witk oiH 1 Woptau-l Hrce. 
lav bottle Lm/ernt wir< (,*h. ar. A everting ^rud 
'ntSJ "Ivr Ctrrvxing Cmf lict” 

He str ar.^i er IvsuI^I.- 
,r W<vAtt are ^ou. ‘•royn ' 

Can fen t'rv China.! r^joli-tcL vrvtf\d unr> 

lander. n S/*vft.-re tke THoJI-w-n ardt YV k«r/^ cere. 

-f ^ ” v 
oca. 'Jrom; 

c * ^i/nv Arrx^i^r tkanuW^dTke, 

f (JaJoha/'K ff tTvt s\oop. ' Hc.aV° -mT 

.^skeet 

Our 

tVawUe^h ft 7U a ok, ratlTCd. iTT 

^ jUottU.v^ot' fce af.tu.-rfc h l 

rill tke Po-U mod-i^ 
Tke lie op? skoh like <xyv arrow over TKe 
TraJ'I^S eceAvi j vnoL So^rv o.f^r p ro v i do vtval^ 
Cmhi'v.t^ed U*v \o^ag.e. 

'"hke nexh Aa^ we jocv-O^eA. trr ; «rcL 

oneweei IctUr \ kad tk©. plea-BvCre. at t -uxeU rrv^ 

U?w d»i\ 

3d>t“ Ike jo evils of tke TrackUlt 
wi(J» i Ud So nto- cvc.ui*vAS<^ p«.£5ed_,eav».s-e.^ 'Yne 
to Aeiir«* O- les 5 kaxardoaa f To^e*%i»n ; and I 

$<xrt\ aftor e-nt^rad prad/ie ah tk« wolW 

Brir/fk l«cr^ wifk"rtv% pYfvilagt of *t;tklr^ yn^ til- 

arvft orv. tk» "Rkor%<^ c*_yvdttxGreTm©r* 

Oc ©an. 


Camp ForclPilosopIry. 

iLLUSTRATEO 0Y A M ORAL 'PoBM. 

'mm m m. 

A 


tnan 

y ~ ‘‘C^. r - J *-- A - ■-■-•• — 1 

n» Uis valian 

tke Vnourn-skeet'! ^ , s . , 

g»aA iVrvt - sk.>Mvr tkr<w k\* ; 7 »-n-U^-n^ 

HviA H CfluVtr^ ^-nd 


vyM. t/OH NSON, 

Conner, of Battery-place and 

^ B O ^ O V >'V' A V 3 

, CkeokeT- -'Yy\*tv <^c. 


7^ roek rulfti 


joll^ olcL Co els 
W 0-5 CCL-5 1 On Oc Yoe/x — 
I v^< 1 a ^ ^ 0 u^h 1 r r. riv e 5-ecc; 
Antd sa'itd ke b Lruself— 
^ I'm- Ccc a t" Orv. tk<9 ^kelf^ 

As hlerih is wsed. ho t€ ! 

I cion 1 1” eare a aiA,r6e; 


it' Ttt.glvf- Uave t-eerv woT^* 

SctioC Tkis jollij- oU CotktScu'd lie 3 

) v« at; II ^ph ex. (iu-tvcL 

fo HYve -for a lurvetv ^ 

Ancl a eaL’IftJ vi'ew of tL Sea.: 

W^o*d fce fk<3 3 ?wko’et. lfciV~ ? 

Wko"d ie lean ? wki’d Ic* fa.<^ ? 
Wko^cd live' — ©» fki. fkreacd S CAreT 7 

Fkeye 5 3 oJwa^ u krt 
O/ ^cine kiVud i'll store 
Ariel w’dl fct/ Po rtvir Unci ever. 

d>c J- itvink I oa.i^ cte 

W7 /kotvh © “/r «r H- V- 

i3wt (X sl'ijv vvO. 5 jcvS h 'hwrn^ Fko roc//^ ; 

/\r\A U ^igg/ecC wltk j°^^> 

Wherv tkc evew Criecd^ako^ ! 

/\y\ei resCueO tkis joll^ old Sock!!? 


L/\t s~r Rvmcks , Ow iiV~ TKaF 
fte # u.i'vfoTt'u.Ticdte. dl<x%% of our CiD 
l2.crts known ocS * r c» cxtv ^t>oo^fe ^’ure 
!o t-e^ *r -e ta \.necd cx?> J^' 

Hie tlaekcccAe t^» vcxi^e^L. 

-- - # -- 


g kxj1\ -to txte 
4Ucmers u-i\HI 


W oo5.vvd.ri&Co, 

MAH O F A O X U F. E K S O h" 

C H £SS "M EN 5 Checkprs, 

j j 

s>oap k FRONT &T S . , 






v . 


o t* ~i\zjy~ 















































the old 



Co 


p'pcY 


Iveadi 


ihv i k owr 


F L A Gr 


c it, » 



©k© FfcA® 


X 


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v An-*L all llvy 


9I Ik* f TC€ ke«rt'» only b«nv« 

V ii\A Hf** g/v^TN, 

• kv wars no.v*. Us *{, t vvelRm <4*n\*-> 

4 1 " 1 -• 'It.* 


k.u«tS 


nr U> 


L 


t 

<*.v«w« 


FOKD C IT Y. MARCH ISth I 8 6 4- 


t"ft i Z € $1 oftV! 




tk« bt*t Original &l»yj of y^t lt4« tk*n THN1 

*wr ynar<- TL*n Five c©(u;h»o <f In* Fcac , £ . 

sent in. iu tk« F.V»h day J>f AfWl., (f^fywc will fay • . ^ 1 j 1 ^ 1 1 7 • 1 ft 1 J 

4 i! . r J of yvk/ek W€ kad lfar. robbed. ***/*© 

m^K’.nC^vi' Sion o* 


We ka^e f 0 Vctvri arvdW flagitiev3 at I 
lowpt to *mu.xd« H»t fr<e. pros. Wt w«-rc 

b^ tu<8 I».*L pi pudii’.V*,, f«aA i>3 &£r Pinnigan 

ahd b<crdy escaped ui’fk life ja»l»e» 

loutls u* ts 3 Ay Ihat IVlcf '«xwg4nS party kad 

b 9q,r\ Crudly deceived, by ou.r S©Crtt (WThi^, 
w ho Ijtrfai fk« vep#vt tttcfc/’ we war-*' Krvow 
Nothings T Le. W ^»<lt r near^ ©.isanKafed 
WS > but W* OO^lMt Afv Me* T , ' v k\oo.>v , j IyAY® 
ft«untayme* of all lleme NTy . )>3i f* 

* t ivy ntdL ^ 


On ouk Oau»Y Litton* 
wo Wds of daily to ’[ we 
*P© «*.©* cise env ir'Uiff V»«r\; 

iv ©n« Ikey tU.rn Scernm*r 

i i% on* ou 3 «tt“ c!~ CkeJ3 
Os\ t)Yi« cr lottv Dur wnvJ l‘rea.tte 
We cU»v'f k>uw wk<‘ek we'd ■yafTcr — 
Tkg ‘first will trn^ >^ a > 

Pke AC'Co>vX. t© (X (cittvCy - 


w-» oar ^*eket ^ook^ 


FIVE TUOUSAMO DOLLARS: 

Rx\j»\e>\t IT l« V,o yeors afk> ttt toYv 

clu,ji©w © f ri,. prei«rvF Wav, in Confed«.ral<, 

M © 


J^OlHfcTION .’— From tL L^al »uV- 
porfev8 of- tke, * Qup Flac,j we acfe^o^| 
xsl-zcLde. to vex'-elved a ^j«(ervdi'd 

<^ 0 ^ a.u ©v\ of C4HM - fiedeY^lc, *n> rv\ ev, wkd 
at fkis lOQjrttO^ Ixly period, tftrrd* 
wc Tv.eeol<oL 8uetcr . E®t'. fovt oe f* >*0- 
verLioJf^ poor ^€yerL Uaose S'rn^le m 

life:— x£e, wlffc 0> Vf 

S7v\aU ciiitJLraix > dTici- wine oU'ywe- 
trewstj w Small Q.« ycwCafU>v- 
Ca.->v4t4e8 Rfty dollar & pt^T Hu^dv^Aj 

luud te^u.iv t© Covd«rm|o[ttJe tk« 

^ 5d«>v kavi*n£ U rs>ke Yt ou.r 

'tu/YW. ^ u'Wefor CA.1W tt> ttve Fo~*y k o (Q t y, 
BoTferPlece"it'K.'d ^to>v^ J wk®>v 
ttv»$ ^©cL-seivol of ■Kflls'* Came, Fin- 

-Uke , Y<,sc.o-e : 0Lvv<d ‘ > v ^^ 

w©r<ds of T*^tr W*e ftrtaK' wke w the 
■y o iAjtkf uX Gr W ctftki y w i ri% iu$ 

Uiff-c kAdeivet" olv© yrpicL kis t>eee <Xv/rv 

JL »« VoVwscl'f ^ 


* Reclva-roC i« KiVws eir 44 oli?v 

* 


u 5 0 >vvc- l alt Ycvftla^v. 3 VTt. F i'hni^*A Ccr-A 
"Ena©TA.lA 3lU>vAtv> a.Tt vuri' C.»a/>a£^ 4 
error j cky>.<L <xt* k«ort*l^ w»Ifc u»« U* 
J * ® A we are »ncl«lteti t% lk»*>n ®u.-» re^ 
Ou,e n-om tti* la^t YYVurAt rfis^ ®,ttavk wkiA !Wj| 

p l 

teoue-A 

etal we*fl #T>vi|»A.YNr ©f 
tke TirenvctYv . tic 

;,lv goW arwa-rvg eevtoiitv IcrvJl 

fJlowe of ti® Ifluecr $9rf wIvpv U« tr >n^ Vw! 
fol »»v<Ys and last ^T'cdnodtt.j vva.? e>nUli 


■ fix- 


anned a>'vd per«®tr®t<«d ky ou.r VUIVayU 
taied foe®, ft* TBYiTi^k ^c^rfv , led U 

Brv^loYvd ^ "&J Lisj 
fcv reflated nii B^it- 


0*>v 

IkaJ* 


eneei. ti aft envjot a JBWII *C anct skamefovi 
ou ‘^ ra “$^ ‘A-jv©>v over joeyXow. Jeal»u.t^ of o^r 

^<5^ and ro^« oJr fiu Jens o f~ E>in wk* 
Sappoyt as, are at Htt tolteyvv cf B Kt*lec£ 
kosMity. we teev kivt\ not <J d warn 

l\4Tvv and at otnerj cli®/a4scd krayef, tkat" 
we #k®4/ UereW*te^ ^je AKMCD # end »u-t- 
td(‘ntk« freedev^ o- x<JL 9 f 

2>peaeiv, of ad I a.-red every kaz urd. 
i^t Saje 

*-^-- 


-A. iit«ll Jj <dfe,r ^Ass €nu.lt Ml 


narw >4 

t!|-AI 


04 


we 


k-ccy^. d 


» stove 


•u,v t'rvfiKd*. eor>-®w tk# h-arU tkod 

<x ddajc^^>Ko>vey i\ tke r#%t of <Jl Cvlt!* 


ned h 


d- 

„ . __ _ l^o 

Soone> we tkif tittle Portunc in. ®wv- |»iop 

*tk*.n Socrer «ne>vu'«3 ^ je<^ow? #f tT»e >tvC€fcf 5 end 

re^iA ^jv«vVft\ ot 

t ^ 1 - ■ is ft • f* ... l .'«/. a * r. "i / w . ^ 


1 . 1 - * u -> little lUoot 5pro^® 4 > 

®e#u!~ ccn, ‘♦nd tU.oJ' wkic/v was Wxk»vded- “4 a 
oleitotg to tt\ne<vfent t* Ucwi ou»r ia-\ie L 
^Ax’hkg envv and (JU«eW>©M| in H\t Ci>nVHu.ndi 
^ e ft"ey far fev ke-C/TVvcc ^ poefr ^^t ImmcI} 

parent ( tWi L to Ka.v© # w> Unt^py W eedth 
Ike frurffwl Vvvofkev ar a«Jamitt’e% ft rkTj 
-fid and ivyvjo fltfccdtol k?47n>nu,n4.‘by of" vhtaowS 
pafr(‘#h yel‘ymcS / and. Yr\u %tulav 
3€, ^j ^ * Wt rU«yeff-ve SUcerwd to destny t an 

iwtx private lift wilt; lit palkcahon- of" 
Ifci >vajm.le,r. Hencefor/k Tef' Bi® JTerlCC 
k«'e ^Bvfh*®k. under-n\ii\e ©u-r st 


kt^ 

Ou.v 

€.a^(cVns . k-V£ invi deoevf tombamsons wrfk Kia 
'Hin^‘%U '’‘models'. vuv t>rcKe/n keort 
bids~txdicu, te niee»<vw Su.t>se.rvleYS and I*© fkt 
bxLyc pkoitan.K of ©uv G\mt\ defenders! F^>«- 
M C t FiVnigan! S-ood 

tigkKiVeled. <vraA ever acltv<^LTery» We fere 
ourselves a.wa.v ! We aldieccte /Fe?i^n. kmd veX 
Wi^voUntar>j etjlz,, like Louds PkiIcppe, 

tt\e elder Ti'ckwwdv^ LeP lK\ j ^}«efepk 
one bs recorded- on. Cu ,t Tnon.u.Wv^n'tel 
pit«» 


t?r me dOjer riexnwLK^ Lei 
dime recorded- on ^lct Tnoy\^rk.< 


Wile faking notes on tke 

OCCOUoi on or fk« Great Pt-eaUet’, w** were, 
aftaokeol aw infa.fiated mob, v\ko # iur- 
roandeol oar pri'nh’ng e ^ kail* % lv>wewh 
we were foYteU. I© place ou Xenttnel witk 
a loaded wvcu&kel ai tlv® cd©cr* unfel Oar 
■friend^ eou-IA be v^llicd tc beat off fK« 
C©pper“kcccd Vvv^ 3 T hai cLrvt S . ^B»glierbee 
was Conipt®ucovx.s umong tke Vnoloerats, 

* YET LATER! 


er 


TV® U avo to reeorcL curveH l 

cef out pevxonat ass as S irxaticw. I A gal 
A. in front of put dorr 


cclterwp P 


ut jo€y%o 

lows woes erectsd »n 

on PVt’day la9p,a.nd we wev*e tierea.frY\*d 
w/tk L^n<ik kaw if w« Yefasei fr SaL 
mil' t~ 0 Vwob-ru.le . Tkc ruffian^ even v*en 
SO far- CCS dig a frevv^K 9 v/-krak Haey 


--- &—, ---— sfartd 

i>^fjUd7oT^4 1 HtncvfVrUv lep every c aei^l/ng 

tociney, rv^L-nd, wlftt nav y £ed in f . , . 41^ 1 -r\.v- • \ A 

poo/<eP J n<my served jw. Kif UcaJL, »’w*\dt cieelcMred Inoalcl le Our £ d*ngr v . fN j 

- J<7vU?fr «-r\d innocent- m arvnerj bud ^ tke ivnYworfal Webster sAid # fvvk«n k* 
1 1 •- * ' 1 -- ,4t '■■■“ Said 3 o\) >r yvft ount dead ^eh! M 

LATEST M 

iw/arnoocs wrdcL kas tkyeoJerLeX Id 
tke Kdifor j 

We lau. 0 # k kit pteny Twenaeea k 


s toy n 

cf e bfj ! 


l \ 


CCYL 


a a y»t e kt m fe p <x^ i\ ij 


UfS 


ON A Hew REV OLDT IOM. ~ 

Brave Gaptii' h Pvottir n«^er skeuid lack k,$ 

Ecnr k® 7 ! tk© J uaroLen <?* oar f ovivmou Wkeef . 


TO OvR PMRONt. 

We %kal( Vnake ©wr fi/tt object cn ©u.r 
arrival ad Mew Verk. tify .*%kick will prcLllj 

be w»lki n a weety wffev ^ *^ r t jvtka-n^c,- 

fo frem lk< kn-a.tlic.aki li of gefkv^ ttc tkroc 

nu.ivxke>3 of tke'cjd P(aa t dk ©^rApnei . Skouid 

ftie pence be. W ^ warrant ou.r 

Cudaphng Hut meervi ®4 t^car/n^ Tap $32?H" 
ice Copi« ; wt *kall pr*nf Wilt <LS Kearl^ 

Similev f*lkc letters poT<d b^ as ° ATV L 
procured; wltk Uead.nAl and TllvcSIratr^w^ 
en^rayed, dVe tkajl endeavor tc rnajce tt\e 
Oopjct f fit onifatfm* of In-t nal 
In’ adddko-rv we pir©p«ffc t© j^uAliska^ rew 
aeeu. r ate p»tkr eXj de I • '.*\ <a f.ng life Of* Camp 
T©ycL ? Gamp Gr©ce ; *tt 3 printed on *kcets 
inserted, ik e-i.c.tv. wnmier of Ike ClcLTlo^, 
vwf k * t itii and Cavnp /ete L\^ 

eer^ PriptfnerS at fedd f VaatLanc^ 


ToMMC.aiP.A 


LCt N. 


All kindly acts arc for 1k« dear Logo’s sake, 
AY.ci UW 5wed love arvd retorj»«r j < ikay evaim. 
1 waj n\ fpriroiv*"^ /kcvj O^vr Stavio- Ypake, 


1 

a. an 


b 


Yn< y v tame. 


I H 


ere. 


f^© ( Lady. vvt:« tky Htnyh w» fk ©tkcr's l 

And iitlrrs p«'ly ©keers fkt Oapkvee Ict^ 

T Pratk keeps Wtr v^cord in Ik© c©u r tj above, 
Anolrttou art" t\©F 

*T k vug k VvntL CY\3 w nv ( a.rci >4 aI«> 3 r*ia^«d tk«ir 

CX^r ku.-m.an bcion* Yv\u.d~ k kindred 
^Avid Cy«S tkat tl«2ed. —^ ru.ttfes lurid k'gkti 
5JfPity. tla rs »vi<x.y wet. 


"Were. oJl lik rt^t© krr>i dajy void of kales. 

And Iwaj eJ. vyisk und f 3 taCtfu.1 tttt^b /7 

^Jo ^a|f wooUd v'-OvYvrv Ltwean ©YTvferudn^ wla.fc3 3 
^N© YUi>v would be- wm^klr 

Wi)L jiirer’v volte U ckide wktn bvdk *rU frowii^ 

VVifk vnofeerk l* ve tke an^ry Jons t sttll ' 

'Witk uieus j^ravt-rj to »v»V\ God's llesSini dt»vtn 
r WTW* tko land fe fill, 

e.11 (tvy ma.tr «yx K©xtl w«tk jorun o^r 

Tor cktldren. J^arei f? bless* Ua^'^lkc^<d years 
Y\<auC« lri.Tky kem© and plenty ttvy door, 

Ar»d lyniLs IT dry all tears. 


eaok civecrinp Lpe and Stetkin^ word. 


I % AN editor, , 

Wk« iVe>n tKc tffeate of” Kuo 

15 JjaNj trvg ccp fr^ir 
tyvfr , 


» v w. 

joudrons 



.^^Tvd fYU(x\j cook C4v*©-Yin^ »t«y7« ann jwi PU,, g 

TUt tLu ti as 3 sad priw^ntrs kastgi v<1TXj 
e©all©ck lyBim. wk* att our pYaytyj keaYct. 
3ting tke© reward )\\ p eav*c-n . 

EampForo, TyteR.T«c»As>raM« 14. IlS^^ • 


































































■0 _ *■ 


f 


k 


* 







the: old f u a &. 


— - *€ ared #-n d«?ek , or £.r vf c*n. 

order bvA.h Tkey we-ve mef" -rr.'lls. [Jack Uokt mu.tfir<4 


oarM.'k 

rua> 

r 


_ ’ATrtBxLiNa 1, EAF FK«M TWC l> «fc 
n’K Ol» 'Whaur.'—- Cur tr<w w<_ye. u_ ^ 

and Vi'/la^ous U»kiY>£ *et of key vvCt< 

ike Wr-SCftvoringv froiR »ca-riy <yery nod _, ioiv r <Kv»cL 
.^wfxrr c l5o»tic worcU and. ele«r>€J*fcft o»4k* l*v a.11 
hn«^ki‘ beLaa-rd cm alrriotF ocrv’g Virn* 

« U«>f tNC>« tlx >v«tUi-ni b«*t~ L tr j flxd **wVk 

all dwct^ cvrxd h&.h.1t »> offifers. 

TU «»* ^tvtv 

tkej vn __ __ 

an ci «]Ur Sy'dcnce* of Vv>uUr-d/rud*i 
^ i« gKcch u,*Tv£4V-&m€A% • *Mv Mzey% wi 

5,^ bu.r*€t.r y ki^L SjJi T'f«AiL, <xn d ( 

tOTn« In dr^e-Teci *x vvwAgUT «T **vj trmc prt 
e-»iTa7 cm***, wruwi po-. sd'y a. mcvtiiw fcMd 

J.wod^Vvtd. T l J J 

■U jof^parC 1 Oa u.»a. sed x-lL ~thc 

L**>mS k 'ft be. Y'i-r>v* V %.«L tw rrw StoLta-T o rvv\ k^pah 

^5 Ca*t-fiJLr and nta^ af 

\ y\<L. f W •»* «t\ fk* adarF co»xjta>UXx ‘ «d^(. t-eLUorr> 

. «f tv>* deck. J 

'M'rffot n-v "ttxij S>(<d« nivrU Itw 

V/kole f*k*ftaf^iu*wk* r* vy< UaM. aou.Ut, A ‘ tU« CLtoe ardj 
** oL enli-r<d *k * frfvd « ft aA-dW d ■ L U . > ; ^u,r 
skine aud ikv gerdle U,<*„ of tti. LaH'fcaUAr 
»VeW*,d.t» irfL«w. («,, R lH Uv w tl and_• 

icTtor f«nu|i prevailed, . < * 


. l ft'vjt.ofj a.,,.'. w*(oiu'hd r w a, 

tA.vor'»M« o^yorWivl ^ £ r+ftrc tj vn^ aln ,«Urc 
ilet<. i4«rtv .v*rea», V fc me, drear,* tram*. 

t&« ^ <i*nere-*»r and. kofopdr scene!. M, am 

V Xi* T*** a» P roa«L,lo'L, i 

-«J< -r«aX, J tou-U. J»< »«, .v.ft o*,.^ 

l »r>-eatok<Ft 0^-4 vn>< t^rin-^ftrrif,-. 


r\j arm-Ar^OK a. 

cnxcL *Cutfl ,Vo 0-A deck Ir&u^^nc 

k Ww ce*««. «ia m UoY^ei a 


h . . -»ed AixotAm<*\r Co 

areivfy tke twj- t kud bo 
f-ea>^d wa_s ui«m, ,.i ’TL. __ L. 


WWftm for Ike Old Flag. 

STAN21AS.-Tc CLIAKTHE. 

Ck‘anlkC. ^ wU|le {n Iftreftome Ikou.gkl 1 ', 

, i f't*'*’ 7 K 2L^ l r t/ aind 3n\ok* terervely, 

l mink of rtvee, wt^ g ?*£«., j o fro^u.jht', 

VViftx ger^nA. trow o nd presence. 

A T 'cderod l Olc keUr, CXm 

W kft |*o i w for* ftr<< forvd U-eo^rt") Ctrvnn l uju<r> ( 

\ tkiA fcot" #. %oLp<r« v< 7 I 

And Ul“ me wtr j^ou. t* tVe —C/*(Oh<! 

m.Hw vika vwij \uJL~ a, kaU y% oi*.t.d be, 

W«vcl ire ftv % W^tT k*crf Uc^e.T, 

Ay\iL orve- bvt 4*»vf trvvd^, o* fk< pv\. rvve^, 

V^ / Ou*Cd C’tK vw^ Cold Coxn- Aod^tL r * 

lru/€ love. ‘Wi'tr ran 5 

A>vX ftife w/rt% Vr^c kas vv«>-^ed u 
Or\e oni'J Sun *Uam lljfkfi *W\y wa^—• 

' T i x wk«*v r cf't' Irt^s Ikro*' oar eonral. 


/if)'vtkf?Si;M£WS. 


/ 


PROS PEC TUS: 


'The firjt yutmter o~f ck. - o tOaaiorm.1” 

ly Ktw.paptv ewti 'tleJ. 

the corn-dodger ad¬ 
vocate 

• AN o 


undaunted companion. 

viH k«. iniuJL 

Apfuc F ir»t,— H>6 4~. 




llvow ftmJt*- vwa^ot 


Larmg iia}t / April . 7"tk,'(;4\, rouiliskoL 

se ^- ' "■ o<iv«>v*<. of oLaJt \y\ «rder h Ti 

KiU- J^ri Uri_ ^ •&*«■.. XJ^votacL h,Tt^ puA- 

koitt malter cnx 'Ho- 


Mj i )«aIou.\ Wea-rP feeU j, «*i^, 

Ami Ok! d-oyCt atop Out Tk« alocko.*!® 

To wki*pcr (o "HiaJ - ofker Coln\*.U 
i’ll Lf tvao -Ul ar % cn-ruJ. a U.O.W, 

H« *«ell% ti vwl K HlJ f<Ml»T T«goJ 

IBwP »-f kit Va.yi.k I la-u-^ki 

Ht wwt a. Leaf anoL j a». Eagle, 1 

I v« aarvai for tU Ou wtnA^rtut towl 5 
A.gokf*t kalf , <x»v<i- kalf jalt ttlh Iv j 

A^cf tiu* I'll pL<kg €j m.j Cicrvolen 

l n l la. m a o k 


vvg —Yn>j eload cLbpeiler, 


* "ft *- wa. 8 '^♦oix vejb. 7l»e creWjKnow- Come, anot I'll tit’ tV«e tv nw bide, 

^nt"ieir^Asr ^ wnK < k ,n ', : . lM £ik v w r j 

A. .L-.i »PL..._JE- *.T\rP A 4 rtxn»« >nai« ic wUl., 


rt\<. 5tre,*.vn, wu n ( cUDplV*tn, 

rw^ Miiavatered. f^Ccrs a n 4 lit SaTttt -faft>w 

avalteit T*t».’ Tk«, <!<«> of aki'ek I 

ruid. Xrt-amieX^ 4 sL^ldl iwv«r*« *ncr«,,ai,<L 

cn 3 affei* ^ea.vr ol kv«.y^ kea-vP-viel 
»v»u.(ii tktif kavn. >»v»j Sadi faft . 

fc ^ W 7^ v c k»|' > *-'> lui" lltkvrxk.4 

fc l«K »tv life oU.^, I ,a‘.-,ccl o;»LL 

«ni ratka. „i <W- Qracin ktaX^ ' ’ 

w *'«j «• 3)i\er my 1 BI« # X c»v- 

«-rt* ffi € iLapk, —k»>ror wa, i'k tver^ eje 
n« «**k, «■ nne I*.king Ikal.'tm.^ sk.d. over 
Nie Tallen oeiv, wa.v(ejj lus Ur\a ulta,rvi- 
Ing krufe^Yvow orirnSoneJl l» fkt Kilh' As 
ke ccMxgkk V'^Ivk of n\«^ !ve fell 4ajok.a.TwL I 
ko^tteneel fo er-aLtwine it life islt!/ rtrrvurveal, 
kwA~ akl ! Ike libw was fa/al — ? kt fZi£ -tt&8 
deom L. 1 

BaTH tt< ov/r Bcr« oi/cket. XrTtnrl 

Cik, cn-ftie Hi gkh of M<wok 4lk,lj fc L, a 
fuXPig — ieaJlv dOM-rel lj an. over ilojt of 

Col - Notfa jpeciAe 44 TktTaior. of tka-Da-^' ^l*,en 
'Far tke war-po)e oT Mbvmifltna S 0 w- i-SLrSl 
[Too rnivok. ea.re, ea-nmip l«y ikereiW. ’Ji Ike, 
teta of S ixriae, <»-9 il« nareotie arui. !&>{>£'yivg 
effects ka.ve leerv e*^«r»«noed. 4^ mo.yyfj in 
1-oference h tke. deoea-se^ pig —wereteom- 
\wend Ikal" if* Tewajiit V® <leioo*ileA ire Hte 
'Arnd of 'tkavh ofker tenJer Tnorljr^ lkt'pigJiM.“ 


’Tnl/I Uald, u-S bjtk j dea.r vh aid, to^tfktT ! 

eBTAWLKS 


LINES 


cm rue 


T*w OLD FLAG. 

D£PARTUREo/RQSA” 


F ftrtwcll ; olol fr4A*rd! dean (partner of rvu# t.il l 

Gro bvow,>« adr»cc«C P.v\d 9Cftvr tk< T«_A«oryv soil. 

Wit. k^nCFome V»*f /k< tuT^f prain«s freoid. 

And leave nailtv lx ki« lorvd^ sked. 


Ongrat# (^d vvpvld ! Hva/ %hU V>dtfrrta>i« lend*! 
Rem d io9*lc*# tali'. li\<d C^-r^eraaL fV‘«nd9.‘ 

FfttooU depar ts -rn^ tiie^ mv 

A>%d (tave» Iki* Iml^rkcAXT^ k wit-ering bli>ki 


one 

Teack 


Vc good jn<L 4%* UeaL wfc ok^fVc _ ,,v 

YKA J U ^ J **"**?* ^wal onl Fc-r«ldnN€w», Wjf; 

A dva>^4 ^ftrrvervtj «xrvc C©r r*tp o rd<.rcc* . 
m C f E T* d-)fc|©cx.T imervt' it. uniier 

\i» ft iy 4UP 4 k e T ^ wc ‘S Marian, J- 

^ ^ T » eeleiraied tom pan - 

M~. of ifb/MBOLOT ; 1x fk» (rav.U w.fl allerd to 
t HoMayiee, a.nA Ttu. ftrlf >vavakn- will for l.i r 
tU. opening ckapkvj of a tivvllllflui NoYeleff* irv- 

t-Ked, tke “FATAaONIAN TS I A N Tj «r TC 

Pf'4T 1 | DAT fE^ rAt<S ‘ 6N 0H Tfte ft HI HE A pair- 

• ^le, *7 IBI ctd ,EJ<tir Qnd.'HtYTCT " Owe 

Ftorfc kan d. 

dll,amater.tom, son ,r«. 

PLelliskevS 4nl*T>o|pTict?f'3 

5kin-ioni AlltYj, ffoaX VAv. 

-Xdc t s7 ~ 

J YOUNG WIDOWER, S.A- 

co,, Jjes i rts ^3 out d in a privdU fam- 

ly wl\erc kd't society 11 Cdk^i cle V<ol 

rr e^u.i voleivf for k»$ Vnea-ta and (od^ii\^s. 
Addrees, TT XffiY Ley, Soap streak 


l!3^T 0 o«jct T 4a.oL«.r® w^o a>« irlty tlfeA 
m Etcq , tto uvc ka|»py h t« able U an- 

rv.ocA.noe food* ^MV. Ht^e Ccm/fedjerata ^®n- 
VrU«i'*nrf «f mka.*nje ) kas VfttumoL tf Camp 
Ford, O-ni. W«x» kad <Xrv. mJervn^w witVc our *9' 
teemed frtered , /Roeens , t^e FedtypJ. A^ervF' 
of e < cd t 




N/Ut. R- 

of 


a»&wra \u TWcaF W 
e^cctir 


tucj strong bs 0 pv$ oT Soon fcWCCJm^T an Oorrar^* 
Vv.cnF wkicR we will neietLfcAkd f-roiw 
rmpneonmend ctrud vvStorecL ^o /rrends. 


4 PROFESSED C ocKjwkc a^YvAerstaTvclj 

boL.ldv\g CoKv‘]BreocA i tv r 1 iln ih^le 

___ - - tVH-ol <*• per m (unenL jilwatCon dk tk« U»eda-va\- 

~bi? w oflj anamerred #f tk, a.,v,'nu okarmJ fed JvTe»B-r oenv, G or .Battery P Uce awX Skitv- 

1 vo rt« errn-Hk m w 3 Verdl.ro arm Sj Vorvt Alley 

“ n K< L ' ,U It* 'Lekr strifevj*L k-t ^ 

^ h * trnwn.VHjownforw ard face! |R | r RnniTh L 

7 »i /%DLl Dl/UItU vovno >n«n. wke 

F? T” ^'L, 1 1»W ^ .««, /\r n a‘WHEEL- ^ answe-r alt <JpeS~ 

Tor oCav fcy oLu* oar ^y>ufutklto kc<aL ar»*vn \ !■ -™ , , , ~T - , I V ■ . 

Amt wkoX ^kmwndiWUrsVl.dair^l d forw Un% k S °VD 5 | *- 

To >ro tkoa Cames l, avui founota k^^k°«eW eonstanf cniplo^vnent an<l fijn- 
r. . ovaDi'e. exeraijo fce^ a pr lyxg! ^ tke Lafke - 

V\ Kah ItvDiogtv ttyt>Lv ^rcltx 9»u-r*«d ^ower ^VorK SK © |*» / cf Fvf(fc Ave.'v'-kc^ 

aAnd. VnaTvy an. emiTyD jc/a-nr jn rnirtt. ^ticrnAj Hotel. Gjradu.ale5 oif Hv< T^cc-roieilc Bar^tic., 
^-t" JVuftv^k my vjeu^kfux bpftrtfc dislicrUd Cfc.^ in»tV U et^2.d \vv new \YvccSCvA.lar de-vcUpTwinti 
TuV bate i ev-rc p cat an ft on fKy pre 3 «rtce ryo*m«d -— -- ■ ■ 

TU k-xW/ tfv«« nd* — Could/ not k*n««v rv#r “ftoL 

^Pk*. ckarnis TtiaF tkeu_ t» vm, Vwoadd- ofhreread. 

NdEcree like tt\ine otU Common Jkm 

Till love lik^ tninc, »o\\td* two »*tcU in »r\t' 

Ta.Te.weU, oica,-rR6S«t • T 0O" <AT-<ly tiftK 

v ^»-« >'w tV» R«w.r 1 learned tv prix* 7k>no~ ^3^ • 

Tile g&tt£ Ucve ft5ed le*Wtnd HLy WAyi^ftftY — 

I Cxlyvc ryiy p and d* ©jo Irrmey Tear ! 

jMos, 


r —_ We kave kea.rd vh lu. guested. 

x xm u?ter tkc T^tkTrv of tk« pn‘vo>LA.T-« of Hi .3 pla.ee 

*> N.C. u & e, given. Calltd P^iiohiaS UHim^B^LLT' 


ALL Kl H a 3 of* 

JOB PRINTIMCt 

AT THIS OFFICE, 


THE OLD FLAGT 


-£©©eS>- 


)BffW TERMS.~ 

T > £« A NNOM . - 

*" Jk« 


KICK_ 


_*tf.OO 

_.jes- 


contributions , 

Are -respectfully solieif-ed fr»m fell c.- Local 
Wevvo^ Keyitv/a , Poetry,Xlcnavvce , 4Vlt and 
ttarnor, A dvartin rrtrjY, 

W.HtVt. 

F^BnaMER L. f^ofaiKToa. 





























































CAPTAIN MAY’S OWN STORY 

OF 

CAMP FORD 

STRANGEST CELEBRATION ON RECORD 

“THEY NEVER FOUND THE FLAG” 

Note:—This story has not heretofore appeared in any publication, but was read before his comrades 
at a meeting of Elias Howe, Jr., Post, No. 3, by Captain May. 


F AMILIAR as are the names of half a dozen 
Southern prisons—Andersonville, Libby, 
Belle Isle, etc.—somehow, that of Camp 
Ford, Texas, has received least notice of them 
all. And yet, with the possible exception of 
Andersonville, I doubt if any of them con¬ 
tained half the number of Union prisoners of 
war that were corraled in our hell in Texas. 

At the time I was exchanged, after an im¬ 
prisonment of between 13 and 14 months, 
there must have been eighteen or twenty 
thousand men. 

“Camp Ford’’ prison pen was four miles 
from the city of Tyler, Smith County, Texas, 
1 1 0 miles from Shreveport, La. 

At the time we celebrated Washington’s 
Birthday, February 22, 1 864, there were only 
about 7,000 prisoners, confined within a stock¬ 
ade made of pine trees averaging 1 7 feet in 
length, split in half and set upright. Orig¬ 
inally this enclosed about two acres, but was 
enlarged after the Red River expedition to 
seven acres. 

The prisoners were barefooted almost to a 
man; shirtless and few with even the shreds 
of a blanket to protect their shivering limbs 
from the fierce “northers” of that country! 

We built log huts—shebangs we called them 
—with chimney stacked with clay and oak 
strips, the chinks plastered with mud, which 
hardened like asphalt. 

Love of the Old Flag—it never slumbered 
in the hearts of the ragged, hungry, shivering, 
vermin-infested armies in the prison pens of 
rebeldom. No offers, however tempting they 
might be, with release from this hell on earth, 
ever for a moment tempted one of those un¬ 
happy “Yanks” at Camp Ford to waver in his 
allegiance to the Flag! 


On Wednesday evening, February 17, 

1864—to be exact, as records still in my 
possession show, at 6:30—delegates from 
the different “messes” assembled in Undaunted 
Hall, corner Battery Place and Shinbone Alley, 
Camp Ford, Texas, for the purpose of making 
arrangements for “celebrating” Washington’s 
Birthday. 

The meeting was called to order by Captain 
Thomason, of the 1 76th New York, and Major 
R. C. Anthony, of the 2d Rhode Island Cav¬ 
alry, was made temporary chairman. The 
major removed his cob-pipe long enough to 
state briefly the objects of the motley as¬ 
semblage. Lieutenant C. E. Page, 4th U. S., 
appointed secretary. It is recorded in “The 
Old Flag” of March 1, 1 864, that the illumina¬ 
tion from the back-log fire not being sufficient 
for the secretary to record the doings, Lieu¬ 
tenant Charley Kirby, of the 1 76th N. Y. (a fire 
fighter from Brooklyn), was directed to make 
a raid on Major Gray’s shebang, at No. 1 Park 
Row, and secure a candle. Kirby soon re¬ 
turned with the “dip”—a product from the 
“soap manufactory” of Private Hayley of 
Soap Street. 

Under the combined illuminations of the log 
fire and the tallow dip, the meeting proceeded 
to business. 

Captain Thomason started the ball rolling 
by announcing that Lieutenant-Colonel Augus¬ 
tine J. H. Duganne, of the 1 76th N. Y., would 
compose an original poem on “Washington” 
for the great event of the 22nd. 

Lieutenant-Colonel J. B. Leake, of the 20th 
Iowa, was appointed orator of the day. 

A general committee of 13 was next ar¬ 
ranged for, namely, Col. Isaac S. Burrell; 42nd 
Mass.; Major John Gray, 1 73th N. Y.; Captain 





TENTH STREET, ABOVE E. 


SEASON II.WEEK XXXI ......... NIGHT iOJ 

WHOLE NUMBER OF NIGHTS. 4W 

i ywwg'W g l”.’.! 1 -LHSL»gi... ^ a 1 ‘ '■ _ ■■ ! . ■ .!. ■ i J ' ■ ■■ *"" 

JOHN T. FORD.PROPRIETOR AND MANAGER 

(Also of Holliday'« 3K. Thoatre, Baltimore, and Academy of Masio. Vh.‘e 


8iogo Kara^er....... I. B. WtVO'IT 

Yreaenrer.»......IL CLAY i'OHD 

Friday Evening April 14th, 1865. 


THIS ]E3VE33VXlAr«G^. 

The Performance will be honored by the presenoeof 


PRESIDENT LINCOLN. 

i ■■ nr j .i ii j ■ J!l_....LWM>MM i !i i 



—AMD— 


LAST NIGHT 


Mies 



taS DISTINGUISHED MANAOERFSa AUTHORESS, AND ACTRESS* 

Sapported by 

MR. JOHN.DYOTT 

AND 

MR. HARRY HAWK 



TOM TAYLOR’S CELEBRATED ECCENTRIC COMEDY 

Ae ortgleaiy prodaoed in America by Mhw Stone. and performed by her ap 

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Whea will be preeentod &£CRCICAULT’S Great Sensational Drama. 

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Piinler, Washington, D O. 


REPRODUCED FROM ORIGINAL PROGRAM. FROM 
CAPTAIN MAY’S COLLECTION OF WAR PAPERS 
























































CAPTAIN MAY’S OWN STORY—(Continued) 


Sam Bailey, 23rd C. V.; Captain William P. 
Coe, 176th N. Y.; Captain Amos Johnson, 
U. S. gunboat Sachem; Captain S. E. Thom¬ 
ason, 1 76th N. Y.; Acting Master J. W. Wash¬ 
burn, of gunboat Morning Light; Captain T. L. 
Sprott, 19th Iowa; Captain D. Torrey, 20th 
Iowa; Captain J. Dillingham, U. S. Navy; 
Captain A. N. Proctor, 42nd Mass.; Captain 
F. W. Noblett, 21st Indiana; Lieutenant B. F. 
Wright, 19th Iowa; Lieutenant C. H. Cox, 
73th N. Y.; Lieutenant C. C. McDowell, 26th 
Indiana. 

Well, having appointed this committee, rep¬ 
resenting as far as possible the infantry, artil¬ 
lery, cavalry and the navy, the serious question 
arose as to where the funds were to come from 
to carry out our patriotic observance of the 
birthday of the Father of his Country. 

Of course, a finance committee had to be 
appointed, to solicit funds to make the event 
one to be remembered with pride and pleasure, 
in the words of Captain Dillingham (who 
owned the only mule in camp), “long years 
after the present struggle for the preservation 
of the Union and destruction of the institution 
of slavery shall have become past history, and 
we, the ragged patriots of Camp Ford, shall 
have returned again to God’s country and the 
peaceful walks of life!” 

At this point the preliminary meeting ad¬ 
journed, to make way for the Committee of 
Fifteen, all others not members vacating the 
hall, with the exception of Captain May, repre¬ 
senting “The Old Flag,” the official newspaper 
of Camp Ford. 

Colonel Burrell, of the 42nd Mass., made 
permanent chairman, then called the meeting 
to order. Colonel Burrell was a grand old 
soldier, with whitened locks, and under the 
privations and the loss of liberty that weighs 


most heavily on the hearts of young and old, 
looked even more aged than he really was. 
“I think,” said he, “that one of fewer years, 
whose sands of life are not nearly run, might 
better have been chosen from among such an 
imposing array of gentlemen possessed of legal 
and literary attainments than myself”—but he 
obeyed orders. 

Sub-committees on poem and oration; on 
vocal and instrumental music, and a committee 
on toasts were created. The matter of refresh¬ 
ments, on motion of Captain Washburn, was 
left to the committee on toasts. 

At this point the question arose as to 
whether the rebel commander of the post, Col¬ 
onel Robert Treat Paine Allen (a graduate of 
West Point), could be induced to allow a cele¬ 
bration of Washington’s Birthday in the prison 
stockade. 

An adjournment was taken to the following 
day, for the committee to report upon the pros¬ 
pects, and the report given was most dis¬ 
couraging. And the Committee on Refresh¬ 
ments said it was impossible to procure for 
love or green-backs, any refreshments, save 
corn-pone, bacon and corn-coffee, without 
sugar or salt. 

However, brave and loyal hearts beat under 
the faded blue and ragged butternut uniforms 
of that motley crew, and they refused to aban¬ 
don the celebration. 

And so, at about 1 1 o’clock on the morning 
of the 22nd of February, 1864, under a sky 
without a cloud to be seen, the shebangs and 
streets about Shinbone Alley, Fifth Avenue, 
Battery Place, Cat Alley, Fox Street, Ten-Pin 
Alley, Mule Avenue, Soap Street, Finnegan’s 
Alley and Park Square, were blue, brown, 
black and flesh colored with the “Yanks” as¬ 
sembled, and this was the order of exercises: 


Xote:_The original writing of the order of exercises was found to be too badly faded to reproduce by 

the photo-engraving process. We, therefore, show it in printed form on the next page. 



Washington’s Birthday Celebration 

AT 

CAMP FORD, TYLER, TEXAS 

FEBRUARY 22nd, 1864 

Col. Isaac S. Burrell, Chairman 
And Committee of Fifteen 

REPRESENTING THE INFANTRY, ARTILLERY, CAVALRY AND NAVY 


Order of Exercises 


PRAYER 

Offered by the fighting Chaplain of the 21st Ind. 

SONG—“AMERICA” 

By the Glee Club. 

READING—DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE 
SONG—“UNION FOREVER” 

POEM—“WASHINGTON” 

Original, by Lieut.-Col. A. J. H. Duganne, 176th N. Y. 

SONG—“FLAG OF OUR UNION” 

ORATION 

Col. J. B. Leake, 20th Iowa. 

REGULAR TOASTS 

1. “Our National Union”.. .Lieut. B. F. Wright. 19th Iowa 

2. “The President of the United States” .Lieut.-Col. Rose. 20th Ind. 

3. “The Stars and Stripes” .Capt. T. M. Wilcox. 3rd Mo. Cavalry 

4. “The Day We Celebrate” .Lieut. H. C. Dana. Signal Corps 

5. “The Army and Navy” .Col. Chas. C. Nutt, 176th N. Y. 

6. “Our Manufacturing Interests—Chess, Pipemaking, Lathe, Etc.”. 

Capt. G. S. Crofut, 23rd C. V. 

SONG—” 'TIS HOME WHERE THE HEART IS” 


Note:—Do not wonder at the absence of the National Anthem in the 
above order of exercises—but read on. 











THEY RAISED “OLD GLORY” 


PLAYED, SANG AND CHEERED 

“THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER 


The closing event of this strangest celebra¬ 
tion on record was one not written in the order 
of exercises—a secret guarded with jealous care 
till the moment arrived for its fulfillment. 

Three days before the 22nd, a certain sur¬ 
vivor of the ill-fated “Morning Light,” whose 
bunk was in the shebang of the Hawkeye 
“mess,” had a fearful attack of chills and fever. 
The rebel surgeon left quinine for him, and 
said it was the worst case of “shakes” he ever 
saw. 

But the Hawkeyes knew why the gunner’s 
attacks came only when some “reb” chanced 
in, or the doctor called. 

Some days previous to this, a small tree had 
been cut and stripped of its twigs and leaves, 
and planted just a few feet from the Buckeye 
cabin. 

Johnny Reb never even wondered at that— 
we were always doing queer things, you know. 

When the last speech had been made and 
the last song rendered by the Glee Club, the 
fiddle, the banjo, the flute and fife struck up 
“The Star-Spangled Banner/’ 
and a ragged prisoner leaped from the doorway 
of the Buckeye shebang, fumbled a minute 
with the cord dangling from the pole, and like 
a flash the flag of our Union sped up to the 
peak and waved triumphantly over that rebel 
prison pen! 

Such cheers as went up from those hungry 
throats! No rebel yell could have drowned it! 

But it was hauled down as quickly as it went 
up—the same Yankee soldier grabbed it and 
disappeared within the Hawkeye’s cabin. 

And when the rebel cavalry galloped through 
the camp, swinging their sabres, frightened at 
the thought that the prisoners were in revolt 
and about to make for the Union lines—300 
miles away—that sailor with the chills had re¬ 
wrapped the old flag about his brave heart, 
dressed himself, slipped back into his bunk, and 
while the cavalry searched the camp high and 
low for that flag, he was having the worst chill 
on record! 

But they never found that flag! 


Colonel Duganne’s poem, entitled, “Wash¬ 
ington,” is a most beautiful and patriotic pro¬ 
duction, composed as it was under the most 
distressing conditions; and as the old veteran 
stood up to deliver it, enfeebled by repeated 
attacks of chills and fever, chronic diarrhoea, 
and a disposition to despondency over repeated 
failures of the Confederates to induce our gov¬ 
ernment to agree to any exchange of prisoners 
whatsoever, with his scant grey locks floating 
in the breeze, the scene is one that no ex¬ 
prisoner will ever forget. 


If there were any bright sides to the 
days and nights spent in Camp Ford, Tyler, 
Texas, the publication of a “newspaper,” 
called “The Old Flag,” was one of them; in 
fact, we reckon, the only one. Admittedly it 
was the only instance where anything of the 
kind was ever attempted within the stockade of 
a rebel prison pen during the war. “The Old 
Flag” was produced in the early days of our 
capture, at a time when there were but 72 of 
us all told—afterwards augmented to thou¬ 
sands! It was executed with a common pen 
and ink in imitation of type, three numbers 
being issued on the only three sheets of paper 
to be found in the camp, and proved an event 
of interest to the inhabitants of that rendez¬ 
vous, and helped to while away some of the 
tedious hours of prison life in rebeldom. 





Notes by Captain May— (Continued) 


The following clippings from Southern 
newspapers of December, 1863, show the 
straits to which publishers were driven for 
paper and ink upon which to print their 
editions: 

W. H. M. 


“We paid last week $2,300 for printing 
paper, which in the old times we would not 
have given $73 for. We gave $73 per ream 
for French letter paper which we have often 
refused to purchase at $1.23. A keg of ink 
which formerly cost $25 cannot be had for less 
than $150.”—“Shreveport News.” 


“Prices are cheaper at Shreveport than here. 
Printing paper cannot be had in Texas for less 
than 25 per cent, above these rates, and, as for 
ink, we have not for a long time paid less than 
$5 per pound for ink that before the war cost 
1 8 cents. A keg that cost $ 1 8 before the war 
now costs us $500.—“Houston Telegraph.” 


“The Tyler Reporter,” June 2, 1864, says: 
“A lady friend has taken a sensible plan to get 
the ‘Reporter.’ Knowing the scarcity of the 
article, she managed to get up a lot of blank 
paper, and sent it to us with the request that 
we furnish her the ‘Reporter.’ We will cer¬ 
tainly do so. There is sarcely any kind of 
blank paper which we cannot use, and money 
is no inducement compared with it.” 


From the “Washington (Ark.) Telegraph” 
of March 2, 1864: 

“To the public:—Having succeeded by great 
exertion and expense in obtaining a small sup¬ 
ply of paper, we will next week restore the 
‘Telegraph’ to the size used last year—that is, 
twice its present size (which would be 1 2 x 1 8 
inches to a page—4 pages). We will open our 
lists for six months’ subscriptions at $10 for 
that period in advance. 


CAMP FOR PHILOSOPHY 

Illustrated by a moral poem, called “The Jolly 
Cock Robin” 


A jolly old cock, 

Was cast on a rock— 

A rock jutting out on the sea; 
And said he to himself: 
“I’m cast on this shelf, 
As merit is used to be! 


I don’t care a curse, 

It might have been worse,” 
Said this jolly old cock, said he; 
“I’ve still got a bunch, 

To serve for a lunch, 

And a capital view of the sea! 


Who’d be this? Who’d be that? 
Who’d be lean, who’d be fat? 
Who’d live—or the thread of life sever? 
There’s always a bore 
Of some kind in store, 

And will be forever and ever. 

So I think I can die, 

Without piping my eye”— 

But a ship was just nearing the rock; 

And he giggled with joy, 

When the crew cried “Ahoy!” 

And rescued this jolly old cock. 







“WASHINGTON” 

POEM BY 

LIEUTENANT-COLONEL AUGUSTINE J. H. DUGANNE 
OF THE 176TH NEW YORK 


Note:—The beautiful and patriotic poem which follows was composed while the author lay sick in 
his cabin. It was printed directly into “The Old Flag” by Captain May as recited to him 
by Colonel Duganne. The original will be found in the reproduction of the March 1 st number. 

- 


\\ ho bids me sing? What theme my soul dilates? 

A captive, whispering to its captive mates ? 

Can Glory's raptures thrill the fettered thralls, 

Whose captured banners droop from Treason's walls? 
Can Valor’s story nerve the shackled hands 
Whose broken sword blades rust in rebel sands, 

Or lifted, vengeful, threat with cruel strife 
Our Country's Union and our Freedom's Life? 

In vain my harp the charms of home would sing; 
Quick-gathering tears from answering eyelids spring, 
And all the heart’s deep sorrow, softly stirred, 
O’erwhelms our manhood at that one dear word. 
Home, where the wife sits, numbering, day by day, 

The long, long hours that steal her hopes away; 

With low-drawn sigh, and voiceless prayer, to wait 
The step that comes not to her lonely gate. 

Home, where the children, prattling War's acclaim 
Through mimic trumpets, lisp the father’s name; 

But, wondering, pause to note with childish tears, 

The eyes that watch them, dim with sudden tears, 
And, trembling, ask, of lips that must be dumb, 

Why mother weeps? why father will not come? 


Dear home! sweet home! How many a warm heart 
beats— 

How many a lip the loved one’s name repeats, 

Where Maine exults on stormy ocean's brim, 

And Hampshire lifts to heaven her mountain hymn; 

W here Massachusetts sits, like matron free, 

And fair Rhode Island slumbers at her knee; 

Where dwells Connecticut, midst emerald vales, 

And where Manhattan spreads her snowy sails, 

And rolls her iron chariot wheels, and shakes 
Her golden garners o’er the Northern lakes. 


God bless our homes—from East through boundless 
West— 

The hallowed shrines of all the heart loves best! 

From blue Ohio to Colorado's marge, 

And over Iozva's prairies, green and large, 

And where the winding Illinois outflows, 

Or Indiana with silvery harvest glows, 

And fair Arkansas skirts the Indian strand, 

And where the red men’s loyal wigwams stand;— 
There sleep our homes, where tender hearts, like doves, 
Brood o’er the memory of their absent loves! 


Awake, my harp! thy song to heaven aspires— 

A Nation’s memories climb the sounding wires! 
Awake, my harp! and thrill with loftier sway, 

A Nation’s Father bends from heaven this day, 

From heaven’s high hills, where Freedom’s angel waits 
Closest to God, within the eternal gates; 

Where Freedom’s martyrs, winged with crimson scars, 
Gleam through the azure fields of endless stars! 

From heaven the Hero comes—his awful mien 
Troubled, yet calm, and sorrowing, but serene. 

With trembling glance his awful shade I mark, 

Break through the storm and cleave the midnight dark, 
O’er ice-browed Andes leans his sworded hand— 

His rushing footfall spurns Pacific strand; 

His helmet gleams o’er Alleghanian snows— 

His lifted shield o’er hushed Atlantic glows; 

His breast I see, beneath celestial wings— 

And there—and there—my bleeding country clings; 
Clings as a mother to her first born son— 

Her hero-child—her god-like Washington! 


Land of the North! where loud Niagara’s roll 
Voices to Heaven a free-born Nation’s soul! 

Land of the North, where wild Atlantic waves 
Baptize for Freedom's faith the souls of slaves! 

From all thy plains, on all thy breezes borne, 

How swells the exulting song this sacred morn! 

Whose manhood’s shout and childhood’s lisping sweet 
The dear-loved name of Washington repeat; 

By tranquil Hudson's sunlit wave they kneel, 

Where Washington first turned the invader’s steel; 
On Trenton's plain and Monmouth’s field they pray, 
Where Washington retrieved the eventful day, 

And rolled their hymns through Schuylkill’s wintry 
gorge, 

Where once arose his prayer—from Valley Forge. 


And thou, imperial West, whose sylvan tongue 
Hymned unto God while Saturn yet was young; 
From voiceful symphonies of waving woods, 
And solemn calms of silent solitudes, 

And low, soft melodies of breezes bland; 

And rolling harmonies of rivers grand! 

Thou nurse of empires, at whose fostering heart 
All nations drink, and all have equal part: 
Enthroned on harvests—gift by garners wide— 
Thy wealth our wonder, and thy power our pride. 





POEM, “WASHINGTON”—(Continued) 


Majestic West! thy millions kneel this hour, 

To praise the Eternal for their Freedom’s dower. 

By Mississippi's shores their anthem flows, 

And where Missouri laps her mountain snows; 

And where the Ohio, nursed by crystal rills. 

Leaps to thine arms from Pennsylvanian hills! 

There shalt thou kneel, O mightiest West, and tell, 
Where Washington survives and Braddock fell— 

W hen the young hero jarred, with mailed hand, 

The mystic gates that sealed our Western Land! 

Land of the South! whose life distils 

Balm from thy vales and odors from thy hills! 

Thy brow all sunshine and thy heart all fire— 

Thy breath a vintage and thy voice a lyre: 

Land where the air with 'wildering fragrance swoons, 
And all the woodlands thrill with golden runes; 

Land where the morn with nectar’d kisses woos, 

And where the soft night weeps ambrosial dews! 

O queenly Southland! crowned and zoned with flowers, 
Thy silken dials that mark the year’s sweet hours; 
Lilies whose silvery moons no tempest mars, 

Roses like suns, and violets like the stars! 

Thy throne the summer and thy realm the soul, 

Whose charmed senses own thy soft control— 
All-beauteous South! Thy heart must share and claim 
Our Father’s kindred and our Hero's fame! 

Thy myrtle blooms his radiant brows to twine— 

His name—his heritage—his birthplace thine! 

We yield thee this—’bright mistress of the sun: 

Thy bosoming flowers first cradled Washington ! 

Virginia! from whose breast the milk outran, 

That nursed with god-like strength the immortal man, 
Whose sacred graves enshrine the hero’s clay; 

Where wondering pilgrims pause, and patriots pray; 
Virginia! underneath whose trampling heel 
Sceptres lie crushed, and crownless tyrants kneel— 
From thee, from thine, he drank his impulse brave: 
For thee—for us—this broad, free land he gave! 
From thy blue hills his soaring sense he caught— 

They share his fame, but all the world his thought! 

Thy gates the portals whence his soul outspeeds— 

But all the earth a temple for his deeds! 

Thy hero-chiefs the priesthood of his shrine— 

That all mankind might learn his faith divine:— 

The faith that shatters thrones and sunders chains, 

And floods with freedom’s tides the bondman’s veins, 
And shapes from freemen’s souls the Almighty’s fanes! 

O proud Virginia! loftiest was thy trust— 

His grand example, and his peaceful dust! 

Thou wert our Mecca—thou our Delphic ground, 
Where kneeling seers were awed with Voice profound. 
Thee clustering round, uptowered the shielding States, 
And young Republics kept thy sunset gates! 

From northern mountains and from southern leas— 
From orient headlands and from westering seas— 
Each gladsome breeze new freights of blessings won, 
For Old Virginia—Nurse of Washington ! 

And o’er thy hills it broods—-that form of night— 
Parting the storm and towering through the night— 
That awful Presence moving from above, 


Grief on its brow, but in its glances—love! 

From heaven it comes, o’er Vernon’s gloom descends, 
And where my mournful country kneels, it bends, 
And softly murmurs—sheltering her head— 

“What ails.thee, mother? Are thy children dead?’’ 


She hears his voice, and wakes from sleeping trance, 
Her ebbing life-tide swayed beneath his glance! 

That mailed breast, that soaring helm she sees, 

And the strong hand that lifts her from her knees; 

And now she speaks, whilst all my fluttering breath, 
Waits for her voice, but hears no word she saith; 

For muttering winds upwell, and thunders roll, 

And the wild tempest frights my list’ning soul! 

I only hear around Mount Vernon’s tomb, 

The roar of cannon and the crash of bomb. 

I only hear, upon Virginia’s air 
The drum’s wild rattling, and the trumpet’s blare, 
While charging armies shake the shuddering meads, 
And the hills reel with mingling men and steeds, 

And the wide land with mortal wound out-bleeds! 

I only hear the shout, the curse, the groan; 

I only hear a low, heart-broken moan, 

Where sinks my country’s heart, where droops her head, 
And the great Voice demands, in whisper dread, 
“What ails thee, mother? Are thy children dead?” 


Dead ! dead! O heaven! the child is worse than dead 
W ho scorns her breast where first his fondness fed; 
Dead! worse than dead! whose heart untouched with 
ruth, 

That mother hates who watched his tenderest youth! 
And spurns the matron crown that mother wore, 

And leaves her sorrowing for the sons she bore. 

And whence the gain? what heritage survives, 

O’er wasted treasures, and o’er squandered lives, 

Are hatred’s heirlooms, hurled from son to son, 

More dear than loves that linked all hearts as one: 
Can sundered hearth-stones gleam with ruddier blaze, 
Than the old fireside of our father’s days ? 

Can alien halls the old, old home replace, 

Or alien births our fathers’ graves efface? 

But vain the unequal strife! would Baalam curse! 

His trembling lips God’s blessings still rehearse. 
Would Korah rule? The earth drinks Korah’s cries, 
And plagues descend where Israel’s rebels rise! 

For ceaseless still o’er traitors quick or dead, 

A nation’s feet their destined course must tread! 

And where the Ark of Freedom heads its march, 
God’s Pillar leads, and angel wings o'er arches. 
Samaria’s priests may build on Gerizim; 

But Mount Moriah still shrines the cherubim! 
Sunballat’s seed may drop from Hebrew stem, 

But Israel dwells where dwells Jerusalem. 

O Washington ! thou drewest our faith from heaven! 
By heaven, through thee, our freedom’s love was given! 
Thy hope our Union, and our homes thy gift— 

To thee, this day our nation’s hands we lift! 

But veil thine eves, and bow thy sorrowing head! 
Those hands, this day, with crimson drops are red— 
With crimson life-blood from thy country’s veins! 

O Father! weep! weep! and wash out the stains! 


Augustine J. H. Duganne, 176th N. Y. 



“PRISONER’S SONG” 


By 

LIEUTENANT-COLONEL AUGUSTINE J. H. DUGANNE, 176th N. Y. 


PRISONER'S SONG 

[Among other “good things” contributed for 
our entertainment by that soldier-poet, Col. 
J. H. Duganne, while confined in the prison 
pen at Camp Ford, Tyler, Texas, and not to be 
found in the columns of our camp newspaper, 
“The Old Flag,” was the following "war song,” 
entitled "Gulf of Mexico,” to the tune of 
“Bonny Havens O!” The circumstances and 
manner of its composition were peculiar and 
deserve a notice, as neither myself nor any of 
those present will ever forget it. 

The colonel, on his introduction in our midst 
as a prisoner, proceeded at once to secure for 
himself a “home,” which consisted of a log- 
cabin, or, according to Camp Ford phrase¬ 
ology, a “shebang,” providing a table and a 
stool or two for furniture to the same. He 
had one luxury, at least, which not one of the 
forty-seven hundred confined there possessed 
—viz.: a hammock. 

One night, by the light of a log fire in the 
big chimney, he la}' in his hammock, while 
about a half-dozen officers were congregated 
about the room on their “visiting stools”— 
i.e., their own—when someone proposed a song; 
and “Bonny Havens, O!” was rendered in good 
style by Major Gray. At its conclusion, the 
colonel proposed we should sing an extem¬ 
poraneous verse to the same tune. Liking the 
first verse so well, he was asked to go on, 
which he did until the following verses and a 
chorus had been provided and sung by the 
party present. These were sung that evening 
until a late hour; in fact, until they were com¬ 
mitted to memory, not being written down until 
some days afterwards. w. h. m.] 


“Gulf of Mexico” 

BY COL. A. J. H. DUGANNE 

Air —Bonny Havens, O! 

We parted from our sweethearts with a kiss 
upon each mouth, 

To join the expedition that was marching on 
the South; 

Every eye was dim with sorrow, but our hearts 
were full of pride, 

For the old flag waved above us, and a sword 
was by each side. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

Through the land of Dixie, O! 

For to join the Expedition 
To the Gulf of Mexico. 

There were men from Massachusetts—there 
were noble souls from Maine, 

And New Hampshire sent her soldier-boys to 
swell the martial train; 

From Connecticut’s green valleys and Rhode 
Island’s silver bays, 

Marching onward came those gallant bands the 
Union Flag to raise. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 


From Vermont's tremendous mountains, and 
Manhattan’s lofty domes; 

From our busy marts of commerce and our 
quiet cottage homes; 

From the highlands and the lowlands, from the 
rivers, and the sea, 

With our bosoms proudly bounding to the 
music of the free. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

Pennsylvania* * * 

And we joined the gallant Buckeyes in the old 
Ohio State, 

And the brave Kentucky hunters buckled on 
their armor bright. 

For the old Flag shone before them with its 
stars of silver light. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, 0! 

Where Missouri rolls her waters to the Missis¬ 
sippi’s banks, 

Came the valiant sons of Liberty to swell our 
marching ranks, 

And we called the friends of freedom, who 
had never bowed the knee, 

From the plains of Indiana and the woods of 
Tennessee. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

Then we heard the tread of soldiers marching 
on to join our van, 

From the Illinoisian prairies, and the wilds of 
Michigan. 

And from Iowa’s dark forests and from Kan¬ 
sas’ border tracts 

Came the tramp of bold backwoodsmen, with 
their rifles on their backs. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 


Oh! ye saw our banners flashing and ye heard 

When we swept the rebel armies from Port 
Hudson's castle shore, 

And ye might have seen our gunboats, and our 
pickets spread their mesh, 

From the black Atchefalaya to the green and 
grassy Teche. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

O! we fought and bled like heroes, and we trod 
like soldier men, 

Marching up and down and in and out, and 
round about again, 

And the way we burned our powder, no report 
can ever tell, 

For where’er we saw a rebel head, we fired at 
it a shell. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

O, we wanted not variety, or everchanging 
scenes, 

For whene’er we gained a battle, we went back 
to New Orleans, 

And when we caught our loyal flies, all fast in 
Union webs, 

We straightway did evacuate and leave them 
to the rebs. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 


But our armies held the rivers, and our navies 
held the main, 

And our gunboats were at Galveston, beside 
the Harriet Lane, 

And to give our troops a furlough, and explore 
the Texas clime, 

On one New Year’s day they landed here and 
went back “nary time.” 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

Then at Sabine Pass one pleasant day, when 
all the sky was bright, 

It suddenly got cloudy and we lost our “Morn¬ 
ing Light,” 

But we still fought on by moonlight, and be¬ 
neath the Flag of Stars, 

Till at last "Diana’s” rays went out behind the 
rebel bars! 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

Then we tried to light the darkness by a 
Brazier, filled with fire, 

But the rebels came and overturned our Brazier 
in the mire. 

All was blackness then around us, with no 
prospect of relief, 

For the rebels cooked our mutton when we lost 
our Bayou Beef. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

’Twas a hard road that we traveled, but we 
swallowed down the dose, 

And through Texas some went southward to a 
prison house most “Groce,” 

And through Texas some went northward and 
they made their bed and board 
On the cold ground and corn-dodger—’twas the 
best they could af— Ford; 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

We have fought and we have been gobbled by 
the fierce guerrilla hordes, 

We have drank our fill of glory, and have lost 
our brand-new swords. 

To the Brigadiers and gunboats we return our 
heartfelt thanks, 

And we wish we had some corn-dodger to send 
to Gen. Banks. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

O! kmg live the Federal Congress and long live 
old Abra -ham 

And may they all get wide awake to find out 
every sham, 

And when they make a general let’s hope he’s 
not an ass. 

And when they send out gunboats, let them 
shun the Sabine Pass. 

Chorus —Through the land of Dixie, O! 

Now, God bless our wives and sweethearts, and 
preserve them from all harms, 

And restore us weary prisoners to rest within 
their arms, 

For we’ve had our share of glory, and you 
must not think it strange, 

If we’d yield our claim to Texas soil for just 
a fair—E xchange. 


* This line is too worn to be deciphered. 






LIST OF OFFICERS 


Prisoners of War at Camp Ford 

TYLER, SMITH COUNTY, TEXAS 
Giving Rank, Regiment, where and when captured 


Rank 

Name 

Regiment. 

Where Captured 

When. 

Colonel. 

Charles C. Nott. 

176th N. Y. 

Brashear City, La. 

June 23d, 1863. 

Lieutenant-Colonel. 

A. J. H. Duganne. 

“ 

Bayou Beouf, “ 

June 24th, 1863. 

Major. 

R. C. Anthony. 

2d R. I. Cavalry. 

Brashear City, “ 

June 23d, 1863. 

Captain. 

F. \Y. Xoblett. 

1st Indiana Bat. 

“ “ 



Julius Sanford. 

23d C. V. 

1 Bayou Beouf, 

June 24th, 1863. 

“ 

William P. Coe. 

176th N. Y. 

Brashear City, “ 

June 23d, 1863. 


S. G. Bailey. 

William H. May. 

23d C. V. 

Terre Bonne, 

June 20th, 1863. 


George S. Crofut. 

“ 

Brashear City, “ 

June 23d, 1863. 

“ 

Alfred Wells. 

“ 

Bayou Beouf, “ 

June 24th, 1863. 


James R. Jenkins. 

“ 

Brashear City, “ 

Tune 23d, 1863. 

“ 

A. D. Hopkins. 

“ 

Bayou Beouf, “ 

June 24th, 1863. 


Albert Allen 

1st U. S. V. 

Brashear City, “ 

June 23d, 1863. 

“ 

S. E. Thomason. 

176th N. Y. V. 

.. (t 

ii 

First Lieutenant. 

John A. Woodward. 

John F. Peck. 

23d C. Y. 

Bayou Beouf, “ 

June 24th, 1863. 


O. H. Hibbard. 

John Babcock. 

176th X. Y. V. 

Brashear City, “ 

June 23d, 1863. 

Surgeon. 

David Hershy. 

2d U. S. V. 

“ 

“ 

First Lieutenant. 

Phoebus W. Lyon. 

176th X. Y. V. 

Terre Bonne, 

June 20th, 1863. 

“ 

John F. Kimball. 

“ 

Bayou Beouf, “ 

June 24th, 1863. 

Ci 

Charles Kerby. 

“ 

« “ 

a 44 


John G. Stevens. 

23d C. V. 

Brashear City, “ 

June 23d, 1863. 

“ 

David G. Wellington. 

176th X. Y. V. 

“ “ 

“ 

it 

it 

J. D. Fry. 

J. P. Robens. 

“ 

u it 


Second Lieutenant. 

Charles Avery. 

25th C. V. 

“ 

(< >> 

4 . it 

George W. Hugg. 

“ 

4 4 U 

“ “ 

(( it 

Charles Bailey. 

23d C. V. 

a a 

(( <c 

it it 

John W. Buckingham. 

a 

a it 

“ “ 

u a 

Charles E. Page. 

4th U. S. V. 

a it 

({ Cl 

a a 

James De Lamater. 

91st X. Y. V. 

u it 

.. cc 

it a 

Caleb Brennan. 

2d R. I. Cavalry. 

{( u 

“ “ 

<» it 

Daniel G. Gillette. 

176th X. Y. V. 

it it 

“ 

a a 

T. Foster Petrie. 

“ 

it a 

« 

a a 

Henry W. Morse. 

James M. Sampson. 

4th Mass. Y. 

it a 

U Ci 

“ 

Louis W. Stevenson. 

176th N. Y. V. 


cc cc 


























LIST OF OFFICERS—(Continued) 


Rank 

Name 

Regiment. 

Where Captured 

W HEN. 

Second Lieutenant. 

Charles Sherman. 

176th N. Y. V. 

Brashear City, La. 

June 23d, 1863. 

“ 

Charles D. Hurlbut. 

23d C. V. 

Bayou Beouf, “ 

June 24th, 1863. 

“ 

Frank Sherfy. 

1st Indiana V. 

.. 

cc 

“ “ 

Freeman FI. Chase. 

12th Mass. \ ols. 

Thibodeaux, 

June 20th, 1863. 

First Lieutenant. 

T. D. Yredenburgh. 

10th Illinois Cav. 

Richmond, 

June 28th, 1863. 

Citizen. 

Finley Anderson, Corres. 

N. Y. Herald. 

On “Queen of the West.” 

February, 1863. 

First Lieutenant. 

William S. Bulkley. 

12th C. V. 

On Gun-Boat “Diana.” 

March 28th, 1863. 

Second Lieutenant 

Charles Laurie. 

“ 

“ 

ii 

“ 

Ed. Kerby. 

160th N. Y. V. 

“ “ 

ii 

Acting Chief Engineer. 

R. W. Mars. 

U. S. N. 


i i “ 

“ 3d Asst. “ 

R. M. McLaughlan. 

“ 

“ “ 

4 4 4 4 


William Johnson. 

“ 

“ “ 

4 4 4 4 

Master’s Mate. 

Henry Weston. 

“ 


44 

Lieutenant-Colonel. 

J. B. Leake. 

20th Iowa Vols. 

Morganzie, La. 

Sept’r 29th, 1863. 

“ 

A. D. Rose. 

26th Ind. Vols. 

“ 

44 

Captain. 

William Adams. 

19th Iowa Vols. 

Morganzie, La. 

Sept’r 29th, 1863. 

“ 

Thomas L. Sprott. 

“ 


ii ii 

“ 

N. A. Logan. 

26th Ind. Vols. 


a ii 

tt 

R. H. Stott. 

“ 

“ “ 

ii 

a 

W. J. Wallace. 

*• 

“ “ 

ii ii 

a 

S. F. Roderick. 

19th Iowa Vols. 

“ 

a 

Lieutenant. 

L. Fisher. 


“ 

ii 

“ 

X. Powell. 

a 

“ “ 

a ii 

“ 

J. M. Woods. 

a 

.. cc 

ii 


S. P. Key. 

a 


a 

“ 

B. F. Wright. 

a 


a •. 

“ 

James Bennett. 

.a 

.. <( 

ii ii 

it 

George Johnson. 

44 ' 

“ “ 

a i. 


C. C. McDowell. 

26th Ind. Vols. 

“ “ 

4 4 4 4 

« 

Henry Walton. 

34th Iowa Vols. 


.i 

« 

J. M. Robertson. 

26th Ind. Vols. 

“ “ 

“ 

“ 

J. A. W r hitset. 

a 


ii 

“ 

John Greene. 

u 

ii ci 

44 

“ 

E. J. Collins. 

ii 

“ “ 

“ 

Captain. 

E. Colter. 

20th Iowa Vols. 

Aransas Bay, Texas. 

Dec’r 19th, “ 

u' 

D. Torrey. 

cc 

4 4 4 4 

“ 

Lieutenant. 

John East. 

1st Arkansas. 

Goodrich’s Landing, La. 

June 29th, 

Colonel. 

Isaac S. Burrell. 

42d Mass. Vols. 

Galveston, Texas. 

Jan’y 1st, 

Captain. 

George Sherive. 

“ 


ii ii 

“ 

Cyrus Savage. 

44 



a 

A. N. Proctor. 

44 ’ 

44 (( 

ii 

Lieutenant. 

T. H. Newcomb. 

44 

44 


“ 

William H. Condin. 


44 

ii ii 

i i 

D. F. Eddy. 

ii 

44 

i. 

“ 

S. F. White. 

44 

44 

i< 

“ 

B. F. Stowel. 

it 

it ^ 

ii 

ii 

Henry Humble. 

4th Mass. Vols. 

ii ii 

ii i i 










































LIST OF OFFICERS—(Continued) 


Rank 

Name 

Regiment. 

Where Captured 

When. 

Captain. 

Nathan Hammond. 

U.S.N. “Velocity.” 

Sabine Pass. Texas. 

Jan’y 21st, 1863. 

Acting Master. 

John Dillingham. 

U. S. N. 


44 

Captain. 

Frederick Crocker. 

U.S.G.B. “Clifton.” 


Sept’r 8th, “ 

“ 

Amos Johnson. 

“Sachem.” 


“ 

Acting Master. 

Henry Washburn. 

U 

ik tt 

Jan’y 21st, 

t< tt 

W. W. Fowler. 

" "Morning Light” 


u 

“ ** 

B. F. Weeks. 

“ “Clifton.” 

a tt 

Sept'r 8th, 

Engineer. 


Sachem. ’ 

tt tt 

“ 

** 

William W. Weld. 

" “Clifton.” 

»< ft 

.. 

“ 

John A. Fox. 

“ 

tt tt 

“ 

Second Lieutenant 

John W. Dana. 

12th Me. Vols. 

ft tt 

.. 

First Lieutenant. 

Henry C. Dane. 

3d Mass. Cavalry. 


« “ 

“ “ 

C. H. Cox. 

75th N. Y. V. 

tt tt 

.. 

Second Lieutenant. 

William H. Root. 

“ 

t* tt 

tt 44 

Major. 

John Gray. 

175th N. Y. V. 

Franklin, La. 

May 25th, “ 

First Lieutenant. 

J. Roberts. 

“ 

4 4 4 4 

“ “ 

Second Lieutenant. 

Richard Dunn. 

u 


.. 

»» tt 

Norman S. Curtis. 

“ 

44 “ 


First Lieutenant. 

Patrick E. Walsh. 

“ 

4 4 4 4 

.. 

Second Lieutenant. 

Jas. Bassett. 

,48th Mass. Vols. 

Lafourche, “ 

July 13th, 

u “ 

James Wilson. 


44 

.. 

Captain. 

Fred. H. Van Tine. 

131st N. Y. V. 

Donnaldsonville, Texas. 

<t « 

First Lieutenant. 

T. L. Evans. 

96th Ohio Vols. 

“ “ 

April 8th, 1864. 

Captain. 

William Prescott. 

130th Ill. Vols. 


a 44 


Jesse R. Johnson. 

44 



First Lieutenant. 

Jacob W. Paulen. 


tt (i 

‘ • 4 4 

» t a 

William C. Harned. 

44 



“ “ 

R. S. Taylor. 

44 


ii 4 4 

“ 

William C. Pool. 

a 


4 4 1 t 

Captain. 

John W. Watts. 

ft 


ft 

Second Lieutenant. 

Charles W. Johnson. 

44 



Major. 

T. H. Bearing. 

48th Ohio. 



Captain. 

Captain. 

James Lowrey. 

Thomas McGomely. 

48th Ohio. 

Mansfield, La. 

April 8th, 1864. 


Daniel Gunsantiss. 

“ 


“ 


Andrew M. Corcoran. 

44 


“ “ 

First Lieutenant. 

Mitchel McCofifrey. 

44 


a tt 

44 ft 

William F. Trope. 

tt 


“ “ 

if it 

Harvey W. Day. 

“ 


tt it 

Captain. 

J. M. McCullock. 

77th Illinois. 


it it 

“ 

J. H. Stevenson. 

U 


tt tt 

“ 

G. G. Stearns. 

tt 


“ 

Lieutenant. 

Henry N. Bushnel. 

if 


tt tt 

“ 

M. O. Harkness. 

“ 


tt 11 


S. S. Edwards. 

ft 

>> tt 

“ 


Henry Wyman. 

a 

tt 

tt tt 


C. F. McCulloch. 


44 “ 

tt 








































LIST OF OFFICERS—(Continued) 


Rank 

Name 

Regiment 

Where Captured 

When 

Captain. 

J. S. McCulloch. 

77th Illinois. 

Mansfield, La. 

April 8th, 1864. 

Lieutenant-Colonel. 

John Cowan. 

19th Kentucky. 

“ “ 

4« “ 

Major. 

J. H. Mann. 

“ 

.. << 

“ “ 

Adjutant. 

George C. Rue. 


tt 

“ “ 

Captain. 

William H. Cundiff. 

“ 


“ “ 


Henry L. Whitehouse. 



“ “ 


John Barnett. 

ii 

“ “ 

ii ii 


H. K. Forbes. 


a a 

“ “ 


L. A. Hamblin. 

a 

a a 



Alexander Logan. 

“ 


" 


William F. McKinney. 


ii il 


First Lieutenant 

V. D. Lester. 

“ 

“ u 

.. 

“ “ 

Abraham Whitenach. 

“ 


ii ii 

“ “ 

Elijah Baker. 


u it 


•• “ 

Thomas Cundiff. 

“ 

“ “ 

“ 

“ “ 

Eberle Wilson. 

“ 


44 44 

Second Lieutenant. 

Zachariah Morgan. 

<( 

a a 

“ “ 

First Lieutenant. 

S. W. Hedger. 

“ 

a a 

ii 44 

a 

George Stone. 

14th N. Y. Cav. 

a a 


a a 

Nicholas Steinauer. 

60th Ind. Vols. 

“ “ 

4 4 4 4 

it a 

Thomas B. Gorman. 

1st La. Cavalry. 

a a 


u 

S. W. Griffin. 

32d Iowa. 



Captain. 

P. H. White. 

Chic. Merc. Bat. 



First Lieutenant. 

P. S. Cone. 

ii ft 

% i sc 

4 4 4 4 

Captain. 

Samuel P. Hill. 

173d N. Y. V. 

! Pleasant Hill, La. 

April 9th, “ 

First Lieutenant. 

Charles Nolton. 

“ 


■ ■ 

Lieutenant. 

A. H. Haslett. 

14th Iowa. 


4 4 4 4 

Lieutenant-Colonel. 

A. M. Florey. 

46th Indiana. 

Mansfield, 

April 8th, “ 

Captain. 

William M. Dehart. 

“ 

“ “ 


ii 

Hamilton Robb. 

C( 

u it 


a 

Dana W. King. 

1st N. H. Cav. 



First Lieutenant. 

Thomas Hughes. 

28th Iowa V. 


it a 

Captain. 

J. M. Wilcox. 

3d Mo. Cavalry. 

a a 

a a 

Master’s Mate. 

1 William E. Bridges. 

G. Bt. “Sachem.” 

Sabine Pass, Texas. 

Sept’r 8th, “ 






































FIRST LlfUTEMANT . \p SECOND LIEUTENANT. 


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REPRODUCED FROM CAPTAIN MAY’S PRISON PAPERS 

































“A PRISON CITY” 

(From Captain May’s Prison Papers) 


Fancy—but no! one cannot fancy a resemblance to our 
grotesque city of captivity. It is a place'of Succoth—of loath- 
dwelling in the wilderness. It is a gipsy rendezvous. It is a 
wigwam metropolis. It is a Tartar encampment, without 
houses ; a Boschernan village, without oxen. 

Fancy, then, a space of half-a-dozen acres, enclosed with a 
stockade of timbers eight feet high. One-sixth of this area 
is allotted to the officers, who dwell in log-cabins, erected by 
themselves or purchased from some former tenant. Each 
cabin, 'hut, or “shebang,” as we term it, shelters and accommo¬ 
dates a mess. The numbers of a mess are various; some 
messes have no more than three, and others muster ten or 
twelve. These “she-bangs” are arranged in streets, right- 
angled with a central thoroughfare, called “Fifth Avenue.” 
Midway, a platform, covered with a canopy of pine boughs, is 
the market-place. To this, each day, the rebel commissary 
sends our rations, beef and cornmeal. These are apportioned 
between messes in the ratio of their numbers, the meat and 
meal being brought in bulk, and given to the hands of weighers 
chosen by ourselves from our own officers. The cattle 'have 
been butchered by selected men from our own numbers; like¬ 
wise, these experts enjoy “tit-bits” for themselves, of kidneys, 
livers, and the like. To this meat-market comes occasionally 
some venturous farmer of the neighborhood, allowed to be a 
sutler or purveyor, for the nonce. Unfortunate rustic! Vic¬ 
tim, oftentime, of misplaced confidence! His sugar—held at 
thirty dollars a pound—is scooped up by a dozen hands before 
he can identify their owners; his turkeys fly away incon¬ 
tinently ; his sacks of flour are passed from hand to hand, and 
nevermore return to him; and woe, O woe! if the poor man 
have whiskey! These Yankee foragers allow no smuggling. 
I know not why it was, but neither commandant nor guards 
were ever able to protect a sutler’s stores. Perhaps they had 
no interest in them. But we 'had “Artful Dodgers” in our 
motley midst, who would have joyed the heart of venerable 
Fagin ! A rebel officer of the day once had his pistol stolen 
from him at roll-call, and we were threatened a deprivation 
of our meat-rations till the article should be restored. The 
threat was never carried out, however. Another dav. a rebel 
officer was relieved of his pipe, and next morning found it in 
his pocket, with the “Stars and Stripes” carved on the wooden 
bowl. Our scamps of Yankee prisoners were forever playing 
tricks on rebel travelers. 

See, then, this camp! Besides our officers’ quarter, with its 
streets of log-huts, each a small community, every doorway 
shaded by a broad verandah, thick with evergreens; in some 
streets these verandahs joining midway, so that the whole 
space between the houses was protected from the sun, which 
only strikes our porches in checkered light at sunset through 
the latticed leaves. Besides this area allotted to the officers, 
our prison habitations stretch on three sides, densely populated 
as the tenant-houses of a New York ward. What curious 
abodes! What odd contrivances for shelter! Here upright 
sticks sustain a simple thatch of leaves; there poles fixed 
slantwise, and overlaid with bark, compose an Indian lodge. 
Some householders are satisfied with blankets stretched across 
two saplings; others make a palisaded mansion, eight feet 


square, with stakes, inserted in the earth, like picket fences, 
and covered with a roof of twigs. Another’s dwelling is of 
basket-work wrought out of ashwood peelings; beyond this is 
a roof composed of oak-slabs slanting from a mud-wall six 
feet high down to the ground, and plastered with a layer of 
clay. Hard by the brook are caverns, excavated in the clay 
bank, with steep earthen staircases entering to their subterrene 
apartments. Two parallel avenues are thus occupied by troglo¬ 
dytes. All architectural-“styles,” from Gothic arches shaped 
with curving grapevines, down to nondescript contrivances 
that beavers would reject for domiciles, are here elaborated 
or improvised, according to the thrift and taste, or lack of 
both, which may here'characterize the squad or individual. 

The entours of our camp—those free surroundings outside 
of stockades—consist of prairies, interspersed with timbered 
hills. The north gate of our prison yard, or “corral,” gives 
egress on an open plain, where sheep and hogs are herded, 
where the deer and wild fox rove, and cattle crop scant 
grasses. On the east are woods and cultivated lands. The 
west is hilly, crowned with scubby oak and ash. A rebel camp 
of cavalry and the huts of conscripts hide behind those emi¬ 
nences. Upon the south a hill abruptly rises, with a streamlet 
at its base, which flows within our southern stockade, and is 
called “the spring.” The rebel commandant’s headquarters— 
two or three log-houses—look down upon our corral from 
that hill. A gate stands midway of our western stockade, and 
is usually open, guarded by a sentry. Just outside this gate 
the rebel guard-houses are situated, with some cabins used as 
quarters for the guard. One frame of logs is called the “wolf 
pen.” There offending Yankees are confined on corn and 
water. There, usually, some dozen rebel conscripts, appre¬ 
hended for desertion, are immured. There, also, several citi¬ 
zens accused of “Union sympathies” await removal to the 
provost prison of Tyler, or to Houston, where they can be 
tried for “treason” to the “Southern Confederacy.” We Fed- 
erals have an unsuspected method of communicating with those 
“Union men.” Our boys take turns in being late at roll-call, 
or transgress some other rebel rule, and so are ordered “to 
the guard-house.” This is our “police telegraph,” and it 
works admirably. 

Our “spring” is a wonderful one. It gushes out of the clay- 
bank cool and crystalline It is impregnated with iron and 
sulphur, and the water is a perpetual tonic. We have several 
wooden reservoirs, to which the prisoners resort for washing 
purposes. The upper one contains our drinking water. This 
single stream supplies the wants of near six thousand men, 
comprising prisoners and their guards. It threatened failure 
once, but Northern ingenuity sank the reservoirs and guaran¬ 
teed perennial supplies. Shrewd Captain J., a notable me¬ 
chanical and scientific genius, was our “Commissioner of 
Aqueducts.” He trod the Sachem’s decks, her bold com¬ 
mander, on the salt sea, but has proved himself as useful here 
in “fresh water” matters. To him we owed our earliest 
turning-lathe, and he inaugurated chairmaking, which now 
supplies the camp with seats of every pattern—Gothic, rustic, 
cane-backed, willow-woven, grape-vine-wrought, and oaken- 
ribbed. 


“A SUMMER DAY AT CAMP FORD” 


(From Captain May’s Prison Papers) 

-** 


Long before daybreak the camp begins to stir. There is 
restlessness among our prison legions—homesickness, doubt¬ 
less, in the souls of many sleep-locked hundreds of these 
ragged citizens. I hear the hum of voices arising out <of 
morning’s grey shadows; the crackling of new-lighted bivouac 
brands; the matinal chirp of red-birds. Presently the east 
reddens, and I see the morning star setting over \ onder wooded 
hills outside of our prison yard. 

How royally the sun rises, atmosp'hered with golden mist, 
robed in purple haze of woodland exhalations ! The camp is 
alive and vocal. A thousand voices call to other thousands. 
Tatterdemalions roll out of burrowfing places, creep up from 
caves, and emerge from hut-openings. Red-capped zouaves, 
wide-breeched; blue-bloused cavalry men, yellow trimmed; all 
hungry looking; sergeants with service stripes; jack-tars in 
holy-patched trousers; wagoners in broad hats; barefooted 
cannoniers — rank and file generally hatless, bootless, 
and shirtless. They swarm out upon the main street; 
flow into crossways; jostle one another at cooking-fires; pass 
and repass, laden with fuel, rations, water vessels. Another 
day begins. 

I mingle in the throng that pours along “Fifth Avenue.” I 
pass the “bakery,” where an enterprising New Yorker sells his 
ten-cent leathery doughnuts and caoutchouc grape-pies for a 
dollar in greenbacks. I glance a moment at our “jeweler’s” 
window, where a corporal tinkers watches; elbow through the 
crowd surrounding a lieutenant’s turning-lathe, which whirls 
out chessmen at three dollars a set; peer into a door where 
sits a captain “editing” our prison journal, “The Old Flag” ; 
then reach the “spring,” dash head and arms in water, comb 
taneled locks, and look about me. 

“Motley’s the only wear!” says Shakespeare; and in Camp 
Ford we agree with him. Such costumes never were beheld 
before outside of Rag Fair or the “Beggars’ Opera.” I wish 
our Uncle Abraham, or Sam, could see this sans culotte pro¬ 
cession march up Pennsylvania Avenue. Such head-gear, from 
a zouave cap to rimless crowns and crownless rims, and 
tattered handkerchiefs, and wisps of straw! Such effigies of 
garments! armless shirts and legdess trousers: bits of blankets 
tied about the loins; such patches, of every size and hue! such 
scarecrow figures of humanity! Their wives and mothers 
would not know them from the chiffoniers who rake our 
Northern gutters. 

But they are all United States soldiers and sailors; men who 
have met our foes on land and wave; brave rank and file of 
fleets and armies sacrificed by stupid commanders, and neg¬ 
lected in their misery by the power which should protect them. 
God bless them, ragged and rough as they are, for the fire of 
undying lovalty burns in their bosoms, and they love the 
“Old Flag!" 

I sit down at my “shebang” door to the morning's sumptu¬ 
ous repast. I have corn-meal pancakes, with a treacle syrup 
made of melted sugar at eight dollars per pound in greenbacks. 
I have a slice of bacon, which cost two dollars per pound. 1 
drink my coffee, made of burnt rye, and am abundantly filled. 

The rebel drum is beating roll-call. I hurry to the officers’ 
line, which rests its right upon the western gate and stretches 
its long ranks within the stockade. Presently the rebel ad¬ 
jutant rides in on horseback, followed by a score of guards 
with muskets, and their officers with lists of prisoners. The 
official greybacks then divide, each to a separate detachment 
of the Yankees. Then our names are read or spelled out by 
an intelligent “Southern gentleman,” who is given to stam¬ 


mering, and makes hard work of our patronymics. Meanwhile 
we are standing under a broiling sun, which tries the flesh of 
fat men and the temper of the leanest of us. But at length a 
welcome drum-roll gives dismissal, and the dress parade is 
over. We are our own masters for the day, within the 
stockade lines. 

The sun mounts higher. Everybody seeks a shelter. Our 
rations must be drawn, for beef comes in daily; but the mess¬ 
mate who is "cook” attends to this. Time must be killed till 
dinner hour, and so we look about for weapons to waylay 
him with. 

The noon heats come, but tempered by a pleasant northern 
breeze. Our green verandahs cast inviting shade. 'We gather 
at our doors with books oft read, but still pored over. I loiter 
over Shakespeare; dog-ear a fine-print Plutarch, lent to me by 
“a good Union man outside.” Colonel B. comes up and chats 
awhile; then Major A. sits down to chess with me. I write 
awhile; then study tactics; then beget me to my hammock, 
swinging just outside the log-house, under trellised pine 
boughs. 

A rebel orderly comes in with letters for a few of us. The 
disappointed listen, wondering why their letters never come. 
I get a Houston paper, and a crowd surrounds my doorway, 
waiting for the news. “Another victory for the South !”* ‘Ten 
thousand prisoners captured by General Lee!” “Grant totally 
defeated!” ‘‘Washington to be attacked immediately!” 

Cool comfort this in midsummer. It refreshes us. But 
nothing yet about “exchange.” "Oh, bother on the lying 
secesh paper!” “Nothing about exchange!” “Bosh!” 

We eat our dinner. Beef like shoe-leather. A “duff” or 
corn pudding, with molasses, at the moderate price of “thirty 
dollars in confederate” per gallon. Rye coffee, and an after- 
dinner smoke, in wooden pipes, with Texan "tabac,” at the 
rate of fifteen dollars per pound in greenbacks. 

Major B. and two brave captains challenge to four-handed 
chess. We have a mammoth board for this absorbing game, 
and presently fall-to. So fly the hours. 

The sun declines and locomotion recommences. We visit 
and make calls. Our youngsters practice at gymnastics in the 
central square, where turning-poles and parallel bars have 
been erected. Wrestling trials are improvised among the men. 
A game of quoits goes on. The Kansas boys are playing at 
ball. More venerable prisoners sit and gossip in their arm- 
charis. 

We hear the thrum of stringed instruments. Our “fiddler,” 
Captain M, is “entertaining ladies.” Motherly Mrs. A., the 
wife of Colonel A., the rebel commandant, is visiting our 
corral, with divers rebel dames and damoiselles in her train. 
They sit in wide arm-chairs of Yankee manufacture, chat with 
Yankee officers, and hear their Yankee songs, accompanied by 
Yankee fingers upon banjoes made by Yankee hands. Mean¬ 
time our Yankee fiddler tunes his catgut, and anon he gives us 
“Sounds from Home,” which draws the tears from eyes of 
rebel ladies. So the twilight finds us. 

Then the moon rises, silver-orbed, in an unclouded field of 
blue. The “secesh” visitors have gone, and Yankee instru¬ 
ments are struck to gayer measures. I hear Cyclopean J., .the 
engineer, out-calling for a dance. “Gentlemen, choose yout 
partners! Forward two! Ladies change! All balanecz. 
Promenade all!” 

Dance on, poor prisoners! Cheat your hearts out of 
loneliness! 




IN A PRISON CAMP” 

- By - 

COLONEL CHARLES C. NOTT 

One Hundred and Seventy-Sixth N. Y. V. 

(FROM CAPT. MAY’S PRISON PAPERS) 


It is not a pleasant thing to be a prisoner. I never enjoyed 
it, and never made the acquaintance of any prisoner who said 
that he did. True is it that you have but few cares and 
responsibilities. In the prisoners’ camp you take no heed of 
what you shall eat, or what you shall drink, or wherewith you 
shall be clothed. 

If rations come, you can eat them; if they do not, you can 
go without; in neither case have your efforts anything to do 
with the matter. Your raiment need not trouble you; for 
there vanity has no place, and rags are quite as honorable as 
any other style of dress. You are never dunned by importu¬ 
nate creditors, and if you by possibility were, it would be a 
sufficient bar in law and equity to say that you would not pay. 
There you are not harassed by pressing engagements, or 
worried by clients or customers. There you have no fears of 
failure, and may laugh at bankruptcy. And yet, with all these 
advantages, no man ever seeks to stay in this unresponsible 
paradise. 

“The dews of blessing heaviest fall 
Where care falls too.” 

I found that there was a horrible sense of being a prisoner— 
of being in somebody’s possession—of eating, drinking, sleep¬ 
ing, moving, living, by somebody's permission ; and worst of 
all, that somebody the very enemy you had been striving to 
overcome. There was a feeling of dependence on those who 
were the very last persons on whom you were willing to be 
dependent. There was a dreary sense of constraint in your 
freest hours, of being shut in from all the world, and having 
all the world shut out from you. 

In the first days of imprisonment the novelty carried the 
new prisoners along, and buoyed them up. Then came a sea¬ 
son of work, when they built cabins and made stools and 
tables; and then a restless fit when they felt most keenly the 
irksomeness of the life, and made foolish plans to escape, 
which (so the “old prisoners” said) had been tried before 
and had failed. Then the “new prisoners” would grow quiet 
and sad. The most of them would become idle, inert, careless 
of their dress and quarters, peevish and listless, despondent 
of exchange, yet indifferent to all present improvement. A 
few (about one in ten) would struggle to make things better; 
they would take hopeful views of affairs and perform active 
work on things around them. 


The sun went down, and then began a long evening. There 
was nothing to do but sit in the dark and talk of nothing. 
Then there was a detail made of two for the sick watch, and 
finding that I was “on,” I went to bed. In the morning there 
had been several late sleepers who wondered why people got 
up early and ran a coffee-mill. As a matter of course, these 
individuals now wondered why people went to bed before they 
did. The topics, too, which they chose were exactly the topics 


that always keep you awake; and if by chance you forget 
them long enough to fall asleep, then there would be a furious 
argument on some important matter; and if that did not waken 
you, then some other man (who, like yourself, turned in at 
taps) would lose patience and roar out, “taps,” “lights out,” 
“guard-house,” etc., etc. 

In small assemblages men may wake up and go to sleep 
when they please, but in camps and barracks, where many 
men of different habits are brought together, there must be 
some uniform rule for all. The confederates never enforced 
military usage upon us, much to the regret of all who were 
accustomed to it, and a few very early and very late individ¬ 
uals, some of whom sat up till after taps, and others of whom 
turned out before reveille, were an endless annoyance to each 
other and to all. I think no officer of experience ever ran this 
gauntlet without inwardly resolving that if ever he got back 
to his own command, stillness and darkness should rule be¬ 
tween “taps” and reveille; that with daylight every blanket 
should go out, and every tent be put in order; and that every 
shaggy head should be clipped, and all the little regulations 
that weak-minded recruits think to be “military tyranny,” 
should be most rigorously enforced. 

But as I tossed around and made these resolves, the little 
sailor who was acting as hospital steward came in with both 
hands full of prescriptions. We had two excellent and most 
faithful surgeons at Camp Groce, Dr. Sheefy, of the Morning 
Light, and Dr. Roberts, of the Confederate service. They 
had their little office outside of the lines; came round on their 
second visit in the afternoon; and during the evening made up 
their prescriptions. The first watch took the prescriptions 
from the hospital steward, and received the directions. It 
was Lieutenant Hays, of the One Hundred and Seventy-fifth 
Xew York, a happy, generous, warm-hearted Irishman, youth¬ 
ful, and with the humor and drollery of his race. He was 
always making fun when others were dull, and making peace 
when they were angry. Soon I heard him going round among 
the sick. I will listen, I thought, and find out what I have 
to do when my watch comes. 

“Here’s your medicine now, Mr. Black,” I heard him say. 
“Wake up and take it.” 

“What is it?” asked the sick man. 

“Oh, it’s blue pills, to touch your liver! Come, take it, and 
don’t be asking questions.” 

“How many of them are there?” inquired the patient, after 
swallowing several. 

“There are just seven of them, and what’s that to you? It 
won't do you any good to know it.” 

“Why the doctor said he would send me six. Perhaps 
you’re not giving me mine.” 

“Just you take what’s sent to you. If you don’t take the 
whole seven, they won’t touch your liver a bit; six would be 
of no use at all.” 



"IN A PRISON CAMP”—(Continued) 


The man with the untouched liver swallowed the pills, and 
soon I heard the sick-watch on the other side rousing another 
sick man with the same formula of—“Here’s your medicine 
now; wake up and take it—it's blue pills to touch your liver.” 

“How many of them are there?” asked this patient. 

“There are six of them—what’s the use of your knowing?” 

“Why, the doctor said he would send me seven—perhaps 
this is not mine.” 

“No matter; six are just as good as seven, and seven are 
just as good as fifty. All you need to do is to take what I 
give you, and it will touch your liver all the same.” 

Much enlightened 'by this mode of distributing doses, and 
reassuring patients, I went to sleep, and slept till one A. M., 
when the first watch called me, and I took my turn. There 
was not much to do, sitting in the dark and cold, occasionally 
giving a man his medicine or a drink, and wishing for daylight. 

There was one poor fellow, also a lieutenant of the One 
Hundred and Seventy-fifth New York, fast going in consump¬ 
tion. His constant cough, his restless sleep, his attenuated 
form, bright eye and hectic cheek, all told of the coming end. 
Yet with him there was nothing to be done but wait and 
watch. 

Now this was, of itself, not such a bad sort of day; but 
there was a month of such days; and then another month; 
and then a third; and then many more. What wonder that 
the strongest resolutions failed? 

Then death came in among our little company, and came 
again and again. Then sickness increased under the August 
sun. The long moss that hung down from the trees and 
waved so gracefully on the breeze, had betokened it long 
before it came, and the uncleaned camp and listless life made 


the prediction sure. It went on until all but one had felt it 
in some material form or other, and there were not enough 
well to watch the sick. It never left us, and down to our last 
day at Camp Groce the chief part of our company were frail 
and feeble and dispirited. 

Autumn was drawing to a close, the leaves had fallen from 
the trees, the grass was no longer green, and prairie and 
timber seemed alike bare and cold. Still no exchange had 
come. We knew of the thirty-seven thousand prisoners taken 
at Vicksburgh, and the six thousand taken at Port Hudson, 
and therefore we listened hopefully to rumors of exchange, 
and coined a few of our own, and remained prisoners of war. 
Within the prison-camp, affairs had not grown brighter. 
There was increased sickness and despondency and (for so 
small a party) many deaths. Two Massachusetts officers had 
died early. Then the consumptive lieutenant's light had flick¬ 
ered, and with fitful changes grown more and more dim, until 
it softly expired. A week later, as some of us were awaiting 
impatiently the breakfast-whistle of our cook, an officer ran 
hurriedly past us to the guard-line, and calling to the surgeon, 
said: “Come quickly, Doctor, Lieutenant Hayes is dead!” 
The merry-hearted Irishman lay in his hammock in the com¬ 
posure of an easy sleep. His light had gone out in a single 
instant. Later, our friend, Mr. Pierce, grew weaker. An 
order came to send the citizen prisoners to Mexico; it did not 
revive him. His strength waned, but his placid cheerfulness 
was still undisturbed. “It is a bad sign,” said one of his 
friends. “If he were only cross and fretful, we might have 
hope.” The sign did not pass away; and with the prospect of 
home and liberty held before him he died. We knew that at 
this rate, another year would leave very few survivors to be 
carried from the camp. 


COMPANY I, 23rd REGIMENT 

Where Each Member was on July 16th, 1863 


Captain William H. May, prisoner on his way to Texas. 

Lieutenant John G. Stevens, prisoner on his way to Texas. 

John W. Buckingham, prisoner on his way to Texas. 

Sergeant H. S. Gregory, paroled prisoner on Ship Island. 

D. W. Smith, detached and in New Orleans. 

R. Fairchild, paroled prisoner on Ship Island. 

F. L. Curtis, sick at Brashear and slightly wounded in arm. 
A. A. Sutton, with company. 

Corporal R. Bunnell, paroled, Ship Island. 

William Krapp, with company. 

C. Shelton, with Quartermaster. 

C. L. Derrick, St. Louis Hospital, New Orleans. 

E. F. Derrick, with company. 

H. L. Bartholomew, with company. 

C. E. D. Patterson, paroled at Algiers. 

Private D. Ahearn, paroled at Algiers. 

P. Atchback, Ship Island. 

“ H. H. Anderson, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ L. Baldwin, with Quartermaster. 

“ G. W. Baldwin, with company. 

“ F. A. Bell, Ship Island. 

“ A. R. Beers, Ship Island. 

“ D. B. Buckley, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ A. A. Derrick, paroled in Algiers. 

“ B. R. Dimon, home. 

“ G. M. 'Curie, with company. 

“ William Edwards, Ship Island. 

“ C. Frank, Ship Island. 

“ E. K. Freeborn, Ship Island. 

“ E. H. Hanford, Ship Island. 

“ M. B. Hanford, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ J. Hoffman, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ O. Nichols, sick, 'New Orleans, La. 

“ A. McIntyre, with company. 

“ J. Kellman, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ S. Loud, Ship Island. 

“ C. Lynn, Ship Island. 

1 ‘ G. Platt, Ship Island. 

“ E. Passmore, Ship Island. 

“ C. Y. Rouch, Ship Island. 

“ W. Ryan, with company. 

44 C. Rinaldi, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ E. Slasen, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ B. St. John, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ J. Strasburger, with company. 

“ C. Sherwood, Ship Island. 

“ R. Seeley, Ship Island. 

“ O. P. Taylor, Ship Island. 

“ B. Tognet, with company. 

“ D. Tuomey, sick, New Orleans, La. 

“ J. E. Yanverse, Ship Island. 

“ E. L. Wooden, Ship Island. 

Corporal Edwin F. Derrick, 

Co. I, 23d Regt., C. V. 




YOUR FLAG and MY FLAG 


POEM 


Recited by 

THE HON. THOMAS L. REILLY 

Congressman of the Third District of Connecticut 
In the 

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Washington, D. C. 

April Twenty-third, Nineteen Hundred and Fourteen 


Your flag and our flag, 

And how it floats today 

O’er your land and my land, 
And half the world away. 

Blood-red and rose-red, 

Its stripes forever gleam; 

Snow-white and soul-white, 

The good forefathers’ dream. 

Sky-blue and true-blue, 

With stars that beam aright; 

A gloried guidon of the day, 

A shelter through the night. 

Your flag and my flag— 

Oh, how much it holds! 

Your heart and my heart 
Secure within its folds. 

Your heart and my heart 
Beat quicker at the sight; 

Sun kissed and wind tossed, 
The red and blue and white. 

The one flag! the great flag! 
The flag for me and you 

Glorified, all else beside, 

The red and white and blue. 


‘‘Let us have Peace’’ 


PROGRAMME 


OF THE 


National Peace Jubilee Concert 


FIRST DAY 


Boston, Tuesday, June 15, 1869 


Commencing at 3 O’Clock, P. M. 


CONDUCTORS : 

Messrs. P. S. Gilmore Carl Zerrahn Julius Eichberg 


organist : 

Dr. John H. Willcox 

superintendent of chorus : 
Mr. Eben Tourjee 


(Reproduced in "The Old Flag” from original programme, 1914) 





First Day’s 


Concert of the National Peace Jubilee 


INAUGURAL CEREMONIES 


PART I . 

PRAYER by the REV. EDWARD EVERETT HALE. 

ADDRESS by the HON. N. B. SHURTLEFF, Mayor, welcoming 
Guests and Visitors. 

ADDRESS by the 'HON. ALEXANDER H. RICE, on the Restora¬ 
tion of Peace and Union. 


1. CHORAL—“God is a castle and defence”. Luther 

(With Organ and Orchestral accompaniment) 

2. OVERTURE—“Tannhaiiser”. Mozart 

3. GLORIA—'From the Twelfth Mass. Mozart 

4. SOLO—“Ave Maria”. Gounod 

Sung by Madame Parepa Rosa 


(The Violin obligato by two hundred violinists) 

5. NATIONAL AIR—“The Star-Spangled Banner” 

(With an additional verse, by W. T. W. Ball, Esq.) 

“War’s clamors now o’er, with her mantle hath Peace 
Again in its folds the nation enshrouded; 

Let no fratricide hand uplifted e’er be, 

The glory to dim which now is unclouded; 

Not as North or as South in the f uture we'll stand, 

But as Brothers united throughout our loved land, 

And the Star-Spangled Banner forever shall wave 
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.” 

(By the Chorus, with Orchestra, Organ, Military Band, Drum Corps, 
Chiming of Bells, and Artillery accompaniments) 







/ 


INTERMISSION FIFTEEN MINUTES 


PART II. 

1. HYMN OF PEACE — '('Written for the occasion by Dr. Oliver Wen¬ 
dell Holmes, to the music of “Keller’s American Hymn.” 'By the 
Chorus, with Organ and full Orchestral accompaniment.) 

Angel of Peace, thou hast wandered too long! 

Spread thy white wings to the sunshine of love! 

Come, while our voices are blended in song— 

Fly to our ark like the storm-beaten dove! 

Fly to our ark on the wings of the dove— 

Speed o’er the far-sounding billows of song, 

Crowned with thine olive-leaved garland of love, 

Angel of Peace, thou hast waited too long! 

Brothers we meet on this altar of thine, 

Mingling the gifts we have gathered for thee, 

Sweet with the odors of myrtle and pine, 

Breeze of the prairie and breath of the sea— 

Meadow and mountain and forest and sea! 

Sweet is the fragrance of myrtle and pine, 

Sweeter the incense we offer to thee, 

Brothers once more round this altar of thine. 

Angels of Bethlehem, answer the strain! 

Hark! a new-birth song is filling the sky! 

Loud as the storm-wind that tumbles the main 
Bid the full breath of the organ reply— 

Let the loud tempest of voices reply-— 

Roll its long surge like the earth-shaking main! 


Swell the vast song till it mounts to the sky! 

Angels of Bethlehem, echo the strain! 

2. OVERTURE—“William Tell”. Rossini 

3. SOLO—“Inflammatus,” from the “Stabat Mater” . . . Rossini 

Sung by Madame Parepa Rosa 

4. CORONATION MARCH—From “The Prophet” . . Meyerbeer 


(By the full Band of one thousand Instruments) 

5. S'CENA—From “II Trovatore,” introducing the Anvil Chorus,” Verdi 

(By the Chorus, with full Band, Chiming of Bells, etc. The Anvil part to 
be performed by one hundred members of the Fire Department) 

6. NATIONAL AIR—“My country ’tis of thee,” 

Words by Rev. S. F. Smith, D.D. 

(By the Chorus, with Orchestra, Military Band, Drum Corps, Chiming of 
Bells and Artillery accompaniments) 

mr* The audience is requested to join in singing the last stanza. 




The Peace Jubilee Chorus 

Is composed of one hundred and eight separate musical organizations. 
THE ORGAN 

Was constructed especially to accompany the immense chorus, by 
Messrs. E. & G. G. 'Hook. 

THE ORCHESTRA FOR 'SYMPHONY AND ORATORIO 

Consists of 115 First Violins, 100 Second Violins, 65 Violoncellos, 65 
Violas, 85 Double Basses, 8 Flutes, 8 Clarinets, 8 Oboes, 8 Bassoons, 
12 Horns, 8 Trumpets, 9 Trombones, 3 Tubas, 10 Drums; total, 504. 

THE GRAND ORCHESTRA 

Will be composed of the following instruments, in addition to above: 25 
Piccolos and Flutes, 20 E b Clarinets, 50 B b Clarinets, 50 E b Cornets, 75 
B b Cornets, 75 E b Alto Horns, 25 B b Tenor Horns, 50 Tenor Trombones, 
25 Bass Trombones, 25 B b Baritones, 75 E b Bass Tubas, 50 Small Drums, 
25 Bass Drums, 10 Cymbals, 10 Triangles; total, 1,094. 


National Peace Jubilee Association 

President —Hon. Alexander H. Rice; Treasurer —Eben D. Jordan; Secre¬ 
tary —Henry G. Parker. 

Executive Committee —Hon. A. H. Rice (ex-ofhcio Chairman), E. D. 
Jordan, M. M. Ballou, Josiah Bardwell, Frank Wrisley, Oliver Dit- 
son, Horatio Harris, Geo. H. Davis, Lewis Rice, Francis Richards. 
Finance Committee —E. D. Jordan, Josiah Bardwell, Horatio Harris, 
Oliver Ditson, Frank Wrisley. 

Building Committee —Geo. H. Davis, M. M. Ballou, Lewis Rice, Francis 
Richards. 

Music Committee —Francis H. Underwood, Chairman; Henry G. Parker, 
Secretary ; Theron J. Dale, Geo. P. Baldwin, John C. Haynes, Thomas 
E. Chickering, Henry Tolman, Loring B. Barnes, Carl Zerrahn, 
Julius Eichberg, J. B. Sharland, Geo. D. Russell, Eben Tourjee, 
Charles Koppitz, Henry K. Oliver, Henry Mason. 

Committee on Reception of Members of the Press —Newton Talbot, 
Chairman; R. C. Dunham, Secretary; Roland Worthington, Daniel 
N. Haskell, 'Curtis Guild, Edwin F. Waters, R. M. Pulsifer, Wm. G. 
Blanchard, J. R. Osgood. 

Committee on Advertising and Printing —Henry G. Parker, Chairman; 

Stephen R. Niles, Secretary; Charles W. Slack. 

Superintendent of Press Headquarters —Stephen R. Niles. 

Committee on Decorations —William W. Clapp, Chairman; George E. 
Fowle, Secretary; J. Willard Rice, Newell A. Thompson, A. S. 
Pratt, Warren B. Potter, John R. Hall. 

Committee on Invitation and Reception —’Edward A. White, Chairman; 
James M. Bugbee, Secretary; Moses Fairbanks, Benjamin James, 
Wm. G. Harris, Henry W. Pickering, Francis W. Jacobs, Ebenezer 
Nelson, Edward E. Batchelder, Alexander H. Rice, G. T. W. Braman, 
George O. Carpenter, Charles H. Allen, Arthur Cheney, James H. 
Freeland. 

Projector and General 'Advisory Director, 

P. S. GILMORE 



jllustereb €>ut 


jep tljrong tfje bannereb camps no more, 
&far tljeir sbintng tents lie spreab; 

®jje measure of tfjetr martial treab 
JfallS faint on tbe eternal sbore. 

stoeetlp sleep, toljere e’er pe lie, 

OTbo noblp thus Ijabe torougbt pour part; 
3n a great nation’s lobtng btact 
|9e altoaps libe, pe cannot bie! 


The following sublime invocation to Liberty was com 
posed by Captain F. Crocker, U. S. N., for the celebration o 
the 22nd, and is too beautiful to be “passed unnoticed by.’ 


LIBERTY 


Maiden of the tresses free, 

Gentle, joyous Liberty! 

Not in prison walls you dwell, 

Flying far the captive cell, 

Roving over dale and hill, 

Choosing with your changing will, 

And (as any maiden may) 

Fond of having your own way. 

Liberty! oh, Liberty! 

He who comes on bended knee, 
Though he may no other sin rue, 

Sure am I, will never win you; 

For all idle talk of dying, 

Kneeling, feeling, crying, sighing, 
Which some silly girls think true, 

Goes but little way with you. 

He who comes to you a-wooing, 

Must be up and dressed and doing, 

He who win you, bold must be— 
Maidens smile on bravery: 

He who’d taste a kiss of honey, 

Mustn’t stand on spending money. 
Such can win you—o’er and o’er— 
Men have, many maids before. 

But a pretty price, they say, 

He who has you, has to pay; 

Ne’er himself to slumber letting; 

Keep an eye on your coquetting; 

For in all your mazy dances, 

You are fond of giving glances; 

While your pretty eyes grow brighter, 
Winking at a handsome fighter. 



To Mrs. Col. R. T. P. Allen 


All kindly acts are for the dear Lord’s sake, 

And His sweet love and recompense they claim: 
“I was in prison”—thus our Saviour spake, 

“And unto me ye came!” 


So, Lady! while thy heart with mother’s love 
And sister’s pity cheers the captives’ lot, 
Truth keeps her record in the courts above, 
And thou art not forgot. 


Though nations war, and rulers match their might 
Our human bosoms must be kindred yet; 

And eyes that blazed with battle’s lurid light, 

Soft Pity’s tears may wet. 


Were all like thee, kind Lady, void of hates, 

And swayed by gentle wish and peaceful thought, 
No gulf would yawn between contending States, 

No ruin would be wrought. 


With sister’s voice to chide when brothers frown, 
With mother’s love the angry sons to still— 
With pious prayers to win God’s blessing down— 
With Peace the land to fill. 


May all thy matron heart, with joy run o’er 

For children spared to bless thy lengthened years— 
Peace in thy home and plenty at thy door, 

And smiles to dry all tears. 

And may each cheering hope and soothing word 
That thou to us, sad prisoners, hast given, 

Recalled by Him who all our prayers hath heard, 

Bring thee reward in heaven. 

£) * * # * * * 


Camp Ford, Tyler, Texas, March 14, 1864. 


MEMORANDUM 


MEMORANDUM 


COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATION 


Captain Alfred B. Beers 
Major Thomas Boudren 
Comrade Frank Miller 


HISTORIANS 

Dr. George L. Porter 
Hon. Lynn W. Wilson 
George C. Waldo 


Bridgeport, Connecticut 


Photographs by 

Henry J. Seeley, Bridgeport, Conn. 
Engravings by 

The Stoddard Engraving Co., New Haven, Conn. 
Printed by 

Van Dyck & Co., New Haven, Conn. 
Published by 

“The Old Flag” Publishing Company, 
Bridgeport, Conn. 










LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 


0 012 606 138 9 O 








































